Gell Nancy, Hoffman Elise, Patel Kushang
Department of Rehabilitation and Movement Science, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, United States.
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States.
JMIR Aging. 2021 Dec 9;4(4):e27645. doi: 10.2196/27645.
Tele-exercise has emerged as a means for older adults to participate in group exercise during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, little is known about the technology support needs of older adults for accessing tele-exercise.
This study aims to examine the needs of older adults for transition to tele-exercise, identify barriers to and facilitators of tele-exercise uptake and continued participation, and describe technology support challenges and successes encountered by older adults starting tele-exercise.
We used an exploratory, sequential mixed methods study design. Participants were older adults with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis (N=44) who started participating in a remotely delivered program called Enhance Fitness. Before the start of the classes, a subsample of the participants (n=10) completed semistructured phone interviews about their technology support needs and the barriers to and facilitators for technology adoption. All of the participants completed the surveys including the Senior Technology Acceptance Model scale and a technology needs assessment. The study team recorded the technology challenges encountered and the attendance rates for 48 sessions delivered over 16 weeks.
Four themes emerged from the interviews: participants desire features in a tele-exercise program that foster accountability, direct access to helpful people who can troubleshoot and provide guidance with technology is important, opportunities to participate in high-value activities motivate willingness to persevere through the technology concerns, and belief in the ability to learn new things supersedes technology-related frustration. Among the participants in the tele-exercise classes (mean age 74, SD 6.3 years; 38/44, 86% female; mean 2.5, SD 0.9 chronic conditions), 71% (31/44) had a computer with a webcam, but 41% (18/44) had little or no experience with videoconferencing. The initial technology orientation sessions lasted on average 19.3 (SD 10.3) minutes, and 24% (11/44) required a follow-up assistance call. During the first 2 weeks of tele-exercise, 47% of participants (21/44) required technical assistance, which decreased to 12% (5/44) during weeks 3 to 16. The median attendance was 100% for the first 6 sessions and 93% for the subsequent 42 sessions.
With appropriate support, older adults can successfully participate in tele-exercise. Recommendations include individualized technology orientation sessions, experiential learning, and availability of standby technical assistance, particularly during the first 2 weeks of classes. Continued development of best practices in this area may allow previously hard-to-reach populations of older adults to participate in health-enhancing, evidence-based exercise programs.
在新冠疫情期间,远程锻炼已成为老年人参与团体锻炼的一种方式。然而,对于老年人参与远程锻炼所需的技术支持,我们知之甚少。
本研究旨在探讨老年人向远程锻炼过渡的需求,确定采用和持续参与远程锻炼的障碍与促进因素,并描述开始远程锻炼的老年人所遇到的技术支持挑战与成功经验。
我们采用了探索性、序贯混合方法研究设计。参与者为患有症状性膝关节骨关节炎的老年人(N = 44),他们开始参加一个名为“增强体能”的远程授课项目。在课程开始前,部分参与者(n = 10)完成了关于其技术支持需求以及技术采用的障碍与促进因素的半结构化电话访谈。所有参与者都完成了包括老年技术接受模型量表和技术需求评估在内的调查。研究团队记录了在16周内进行的48节课程中遇到的技术挑战和出勤率。
访谈中出现了四个主题:参与者希望远程锻炼项目具有促进责任感的功能,直接接触能够解决技术问题并提供指导的有用人员很重要,参与高价值活动的机会激发了他们克服技术问题坚持下去的意愿,并且相信自己有能力学习新事物克服了与技术相关的挫败感。在远程锻炼课程的参与者中(平均年龄74岁,标准差6.3岁;44人中有38人,86%为女性;平均患有2.5种,标准差0.9种慢性病),71%(31/44)有带网络摄像头的电脑,但41%(18/44)几乎没有视频会议经验。最初的技术入门课程平均持续19.3(标准差10.3)分钟,24%(11/44)的人需要后续的协助电话。在远程锻炼的前两周,47%的参与者(21/44)需要技术协助,在第3至16周这一比例降至12%(5/44)。前6节课程的中位出勤率为100%,随后42节课程的中位出勤率为93%。
在适当的支持下,老年人可以成功参与远程锻炼。建议包括个性化的技术入门课程、体验式学习以及提供备用技术支持,尤其是在课程的前两周。该领域最佳实践的持续发展可能会使以前难以接触到的老年人群体能够参与到促进健康的、基于证据的锻炼项目中。