Division of Primary Care, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
Division of Rehabilitation, Ageing and Well-being, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2019 May 23;14(5):e0217387. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0217387. eCollection 2019.
Older adults with dementia are at a high risk of losing abilities and of accidental falls. Promoting Activity, Independence and Stability in Early Dementia (PrAISED) is a 12-month person-centred exercise and activity programme which aims to increase activity and independence whilst reducing falls in people with early dementia. In this patient group, as well as many others, poor adherence to exercise interventions can undermine treatment effectiveness. We aimed to explore patterns of barriers and facilitators influencing PrAISED participants' adherence to home-based strength and balance exercises.
Participants were a subsample of 20 individuals with mild cognitive impairment or early dementia and their carer(s) taking part in the PrAISED programme. Participants (with the support of a carer where necessary) kept a daily exercise diary. Participants' adherence were categorised based upon reported number of times a week they undertook the PrAISED strength and balance exercises over a 4 month period (<3 times a week = low adherence, 3-4 = meeting adherence expectations, >5 = exceeding adherence expectations). Semi-structured interviews were conducted in month 4 of the PrAISED programme to explore barriers and facilitators to adherence. A mixture of deductive and inductive thematic analysis was employed with themes categorised using the Theoretical Domains Framework.
Participants completed on average 98 minutes of home-based strength and balance exercises per week, 3.8 sessions per week, for an average of 24 minutes per session. Five participants were categorised as exceeding adherence expectations, 7 as meeting adherence expectations, and 8 as low adherers. Analysis of interview data based on self-reported adherence revealed six interacting themes: 1) routine, 2) practical and emotional support, 3) memory support, 4) purpose, 5) past experiences of sport and exercise, and 6) belief in and experience of benefits.
Identifiable cognitive, psychological, and practical factors influence adherence to exercise, and should be addressed in future development of interventions with this population.
患有痴呆症的老年人丧失能力和意外跌倒的风险很高。促进早期痴呆患者的活动、独立和稳定(PrAISED)是一项为期 12 个月的以患者为中心的锻炼和活动计划,旨在增加活动和独立性,同时减少早期痴呆患者的跌倒。在这个患者群体中,以及许多其他群体中,锻炼干预措施的依从性差会破坏治疗效果。我们旨在探讨影响 PrAISED 参与者坚持家庭力量和平衡锻炼的障碍和促进因素的模式。
参与者是参与 PrAISED 计划的 20 名轻度认知障碍或早期痴呆患者及其照顾者的一个亚组。参与者(在必要时在照顾者的支持下)每天记录锻炼日记。根据他们在 4 个月内每周进行 PrAISED 力量和平衡锻炼的次数,将参与者的依从性分为以下几类:<3 次/周=低依从性,3-4 次/周=符合依从性预期,>5 次/周=超过依从性预期。在 PrAISED 计划的第 4 个月进行半结构式访谈,以探讨依从性的障碍和促进因素。采用演绎和归纳主题分析相结合的方法,使用理论领域框架对主题进行分类。
参与者平均每周完成 98 分钟的家庭力量和平衡锻炼,每周 3.8 次,每次平均 24 分钟。5 名参与者被归类为超过依从性预期,7 名参与者符合依从性预期,8 名参与者为低依从性。根据自我报告的依从性分析访谈数据,揭示了六个相互作用的主题:1)常规,2)实际和情感支持,3)记忆支持,4)目的,5)过去的运动和锻炼经验,6)对益处的信念和经验。
可识别的认知、心理和实际因素会影响锻炼的依从性,因此应在未来针对该人群的干预措施中加以解决。