Background: While physical activity (PA) has been widely accepted as an effective non-pharmacological pain management strategy, many Latino persons without chronic spine pain (CSP) do not engage in sufficient PA.
Methods: This dissertation consists of three studies that examined the multilevel factors that are associated with PA among Latino persons with CSP. Study 1 included a cross-sectional blockwise regression analysis to assess the association between sociodemographic, clinical, interpersonal, and environmental factors with light PA (LPA), moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA), and sedentary behavior (SB) among 154 Latino persons with CSP. In Study 2, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 25 Latino persons with CSP. Rapid Qualitative Analysis, informed by the Socioecological Model (SEM) and intersectionality framework, was then used to explore multilevel and intersecting determinants of PA. In Study 3, a separate sample of 13 Latino participants with CSP completed 14-days of PA monitoring and Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) of factors identified in Study 2. Group Iterative Multiple Model Estimation (GIMME) was used to assess which determinants identified in Study 2 were associated with objectively measured and momentary PA.
Results: For Study 1, lower income was associated with lower levels of LPA, greater levels of MVPA, and less SB. Greater pain interference was associated with lower levels of LPA while younger age was associated with greater levels of MVPA. In Study 2, factors at the intrapersonal, interpersonal, and environmental levels of the SEM were identified as determinants of PA in Latino persons with CSP. Individual PA experiences differed at varying intersections of gender, culture, socioeconomic status, citizenship status, and geography. In Study 3, eleven group-level associations were observed, including between negative affect and PA. Most participants reported lower levels of negative affect during moments of increased step counts. Person-specific networks were heterogeneous and associations varied in type (i.e., contemporaneous or lagged), number, and strength across the sample of Latino persons with CSP.
Conclusions: Latino persons with CSP experience barriers and facilitators to PA that are at multiple levels of influence, vary across individuals and their social identities, and fluctuate throughout a day.