Sengül Sari
University of Southern Denmark
7 Papers
13 Citations
Sengül Sari is an academic researcher from University of Southern Denmark. The author has contributed to research in topics: Alcohol use disorder & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Exercise as adjunctive treatment for alcohol use disorder: A randomized controlled trial
Kirsten Kaya Roessler,Randi Bilberg,Anette Søgaard Nielsen,Kurt Jensen,Claus Thorn Ekstrøm,Sengül Sari +5 more
TL;DR: A dose-response effect of exercise on drinking outcome supports the need for implementing physically active lifestyles for patients in treatment for alcohol use disorder.
Exercising alcohol patients don’t lack motivation but struggle with structures, emotions and social context - a qualitative dropout study
TL;DR: Future exercise interventions should include socio-psychological support during the first weeks, begin shortly after treatment initiation instead of concurrently, and focus on garnering social support for participants in both the intervention context and among their existing network in order to best reduce barriers to participation.
Physical exercise as a supplement to outpatient treatment of alcohol use disorders – a randomized controlled trial
Sengül Sari,Randi Bilberg,Kurt Jensen,Anette Søgaard-Nielsen,Bent Nielsen,Kirsten Kaya Roessler +5 more
TL;DR: If this study detects a positive relationship between exercise as a supplement to alcohol treatment and patients’ alcohol intake, quality of life, fitness, well-being, anxiety, depression and interpersonal problems, it will be recommended to implement exercise as an offer to users of the outpatient clinic in the future.
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The effect of exercise as adjunctive treatment on quality of life for individuals with alcohol use disorders: a randomized controlled trial
Sengül Sari,Randi Bilberg,Randi Bilberg,Anette Søgaard Nielsen,Anette Søgaard Nielsen,Kirsten Kaya Roessler +5 more
TL;DR: The exercise intervention had no effect on quality oflife for patients with alcohol use disorder, nor was quality of life improved across the total sample, although not statistically significant.
Why treatment is not an option: Treatment naïve individuals, suffering from alcohol use disorders’ narratives about alcohol use and treatment seeking
TL;DR: Investigating the narratives of in- and outpatients at mental health and somatic hospitals, who suffer from alcohol use disorders but have never sought AUD treatment, indicates that a broad focus is needed if relatively more individuals suffering from AUD should seek treatment.
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