Health Behavior Clinical Trial
Official title:
Development of a Translational Tool to Study Yoga Therapy
This study comprises 4 phases designed to systematically develop and test a reliable, valid and useful quantitative measure of the components and dimensions of yoga; each phase builds on the previous phase. Phase I aims to gain a comprehensive understanding of the relevant aspects of yoga therapy and develop a large pool of potential questionnaire items by conducting a thorough literature review and focus groups with yoga teachers and students. These data will be analyzed using rigorous qualitative methods to identify key conceptual dimensions associated with yoga interventions. Phase II will develop a prototypic questionnaire to assess yoga therapy by refining and honing information from Phase I and conducting cognitive interviews to further develop this instrument. Phase III will pilot test the measure in a field observation of yoga students and use factor analysis and item response theory to select the best items per dimension and to reduce the number of items in the measure. Phase IV will collect data on the new instrument and test the psychometric properties of the questionnaire (i.e., reliability and validity using data collected in Phases III and IV).
The use of yoga for general health and wellness and for dealing with particular health
conditions is increasing in the United States According to the National Health Interview
Survey (NHIS) Alternative Medicine Supplement, the use of yoga increased significantly from
2002 to 2007 (NCCAM/Barnes, Bloom & Nahin, 2008), to 6.1% of the US population. In people
dealing with health issues, the percent using yoga may be much higher (Birdee et al., 2008;
NCCAM/Barnes et al., 2008). For example, in recent years, yoga has become a core
complementary approach sought out by cancer patients and survivors of all cultural
backgrounds in dramatically larger numbers (Mackenzie, Carlson, Munoz, & Speca, 2007).
Yoga interventions are being introduced for a variety of health conditions. Research
evaluating these interventions remains inconclusive (NCCAM/Barnes et al., 2008) but
preliminary results are promising. Many studies have reported evidence of superiority of
yoga interventions relative to controls, although it is often difficult to determine the
adequacy of the control condition. Reviewing the studies that compared yoga specifically to
a physical exercise control condition, Ross and Thomas (2010) reported favorable findings
for the impact of yoga on specific health conditions including cardiovascular disease (e.g.,
Raub, 2002), metabolic syndrome (e.g., Innes et al., 2005), diabetes (e.g., Upadhyay et al.,
2008), cancer (see Bower et al., 2005) and anxiety (see Kirkwood et al., 2005). Similarly, a
review of yoga interventions for chronic lifestyle-related diseases (Tekur et al., 2008)
noted that yoga has been shown to be effective for treating osteoarthritis (Garfinkel et
al., 1998), rheumatoid arthritis (Haslock et al., 1994), essential hypertension (Murugesan
et al., 2000), bronchial asthma (Nagarathna et al., 1985; Vedanthan et al., 1998), irritable
bowel syndrome (Taneja et al., 2004), diabetes (Singh et al., 2001), coronary artery disease
(Manchanda et al., 2000), and depression (Woolery et al., 2004). Yoga has also been used in
patients with chronic lower back pain (CLBP). Two randomized control trials on yoga for CLBP
using Viniyoga (Sherman et al., 2005) and Iyengar yoga therapy (Williams et al., 2009)
showed reduction in pain and functional disability relative to control groups. These studies
contribute to the accumulating body of research evidence attesting to the positive health
benefits of yoga. The recent NCCAM report indicates that, while promising, much more
research evaluating these interventions is needed (NCCAM/Barnes et al., 2008). Currently,
the content and substance of yoga remains a "black box" in that no studies have identified
the effective ingredients of yoga. The proposed study will develop a tool to identify and
quantify the components of yoga. The tool will thus allow researchers to link specific
components of yoga to specific health outcomes such as pain, depression, functioning, etc.
;
Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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