Changes in outcomes immediately after outdoor exercise in people with musculoskeletal diseases: The OUTdoor Physical ACtivity (OUTPAC) study - 07/06/26
, Søren T Skou a, d, Pætur M Holm a, e, f, Alexander Harrison g, Dorthe V Poulsen c, Rana S Hinman h, Travis Haber h, Lars H Tang a, bHighlights |
• | Outdoor exercise leads to small HRQOL gains in musculoskeletal disease (MSD). |
• | Functional performance improves in people with MSD after outdoor exercise. |
• | Volunteer-led, community-based outdoor exercise model is feasible at a large scale. |
• | Spine-related MSD shows less favorable responses to outdoor exercise. |
Abstract |
Background |
Chronic musculoskeletal diseases (MSD) are a leading cause of disability, and outdoor physical activity (PA) has been proposed as a setting that may facilitate PA engagement.
Objective |
To report immediate changes in health-related quality of life (HRQOL), pain, physical function, physical activity, and mental well-being following an outdoor PA intervention in people with MSD, and to explore whether changes vary depending on the underlying MSD.
Methods |
This prospective cohort study included 925 adults (mean age: 65 years; 93% female) with MSD who participated in a 12-week, once weekly, 60-min outdoor group-based PA program in Denmark. Sessions were led by trained volunteer instructors and consisted of PA, complemented by mental exercises in natural environments, including parks and urban areas. Pre- and immediately post-intervention data were collected using questionnaires and performance-based physical tests. Outcomes included EQ-5D-5L (HRQOL), visual analogue scale (pain), WHO-5 (mental well-being), UCLA activity score (physical activity), and 40-meter walk and 30-second chair stand tests (physical function). Linear mixed-effect models were used to assess changes and compare subgroups.
Results |
In the total cohort, significant improvement was observed only in HRQOL (mean score change: 0.01, P = 0.003). In a subsample with performance-based physical test data ( n = 361), participants improved in walking speed (mean score change: +0.13 m/s, P ˂ 0.001) and chair stands (mean score change: +2.9 repetitions, P ˂ 0.001). Participants with inflammatory or degenerative spine-related diseases tended to report less favorable outcomes post-intervention than participants without these diseases.
Conclusion |
The OUTPAC study found no mean improvement in most self-reported outcomes, aside from small, significant improvements in HRQOL from the low-dose outdoor PA intervention. Performance-based physical tests showed significant improvements in a subsample, and higher attendance was associated with better HRQOL and mental well-being. Secondarily, participants with degenerative or spine-related diseases responded less favorably. Future research should improve data collection, increase exercise dose, and explore differences across MSD subtypes through high-quality randomized controlled trials.
Data registration |
Danish Data Protection Agency (REG-147-2021).
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Exercise, Outdoor, Arthritis, Chronic diseases, Rehabilitation, Cohort
Abbreviations : BMI, 95% CI, EQ-5D-5l, GLA:D®, HRQOL, MCID, MSD, OA, OUTPAC, PA, RCT, SD, STROBE, VAS, WHO-5
Plan
| ✰ | The Research and Implementation Unit PROgrez, Department of Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy, Næstved-Slagelse-Ringsted Hospitals, Region Zealand, Fælledvej 2F, 4200 Slagelse, Denmark. |
Vol 69 - N° 5
Article 102095- juin 2026 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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