University of British Columbia, Centre for Hip Health and Mobility, 2635 Laurel Street, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 1M9, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Jun 11;22(1):1172. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13547-5.
The COVID-19 (COVID) pandemic shifted way of life for all Canadians. 'Stay-at-home' public health directives counter transmission of COVID but may cause, or exacerbate, older adults' physical and social health challenges. To counter unintentional consequences of these directives, we rapidly adapted an effective health promoting intervention for older adults-Choose to Move (CTM)-to be delivered virtually throughout British Columbia (BC). Our specific objectives were to 1. describe factors that influence whether implementation of CTM virtually was acceptable, and feasible to deliver, and 2. assess whether virtual delivery retained fidelity to CTM's core components.
We conducted a 3-month rapid adaptation feasibility study to evaluate the implementation of CTM, virtually. Our evaluation targeted two levels of implementation within a larger socioeconomic continuum: 1. the prevention delivery system, and 2. older adult participants. We implemented 33 programs via Zoom during BC's 1st wave acute and transition stages of COVID (April-October 2020). We conducted semi-structured 30-45 min telephone focus groups with 9 activity coaches (who delivered CTM), and semi-structured 30-45 min telephone interviews with 30 older adult participants, at 0- and 3-months. We used deductive framework analysis for all qualitative data to identify themes.
Activity coaches and older adults identified three key factors that influenced acceptability (a safe and supportive space to socially connect, the technological gateway, and the role of the central support unit) and two key factors that influenced feasibility (a virtual challenge worth taking on and CTM flexibility) of delivering CTM virtually. Activity coaches also reported adapting CTM during implementation; adaptations comprised two broad categories (time allocation and physical activity levels).
It was feasible and acceptable to deliver CTM virtually. Programs such as CTM have potential to mitigate the unintended consequences of public health orders during COVID associated with reduced physical activity, social isolation, and loneliness. Adaptation and implementation strategies must be informed by community delivery partners and older adults themselves. Pragmatic, virtual health promoting interventions that can be adapted as contexts rapidly shift may forevermore be an essential part of our changing world.
COVID-19(COVID)大流行改变了所有加拿大人的生活方式。“居家”的公共卫生指令可以阻止 COVID 的传播,但可能会导致或加剧老年人的身体和心理健康挑战。为了应对这些指令的意外后果,我们迅速为不列颠哥伦比亚省(BC)的老年人量身定制了一种有效的促进健康的干预措施-Choose to Move(CTM)-并通过虚拟方式进行。我们的具体目标是 1. 描述影响 CTM 虚拟实施是否可接受和可行的因素,以及 2. 评估虚拟交付是否保留了 CTM 的核心要素。
我们进行了为期 3 个月的快速适应性可行性研究,以评估 CTM 的虚拟实施情况。我们的评估针对较大的社会经济连续体中的两个实施级别:1. 预防交付系统,2. 老年人参与者。在 2020 年 4 月至 10 月 COVID 的第一波急性和过渡阶段,我们通过 Zoom 实施了 33 个项目。我们在 0 个月和 3 个月时,分别与 9 名活动教练(提供 CTM)进行了 30-45 分钟的半结构化电话焦点小组讨论,以及与 30 名老年人参与者进行了 30-45 分钟的半结构化电话访谈。我们使用演绎框架分析对所有定性数据进行了分析,以确定主题。
活动教练和老年人确定了三个影响可接受性的关键因素(一个安全和支持性的社交空间、技术门户和中央支持单位)以及两个影响可行性的关键因素(虚拟挑战的价值和 CTM 的灵活性)。活动教练还报告说,在实施过程中对 CTM 进行了调整;调整包括两大类(时间分配和身体活动水平)。
虚拟交付 CTM 是可行和可接受的。CTM 等项目有可能减轻与 COVID 相关的公共卫生命令减少身体活动、社会隔离和孤独感等带来的意外后果。适应和实施策略必须由社区交付合作伙伴和老年人自身提供信息。灵活的虚拟健康促进干预措施可能会根据情况迅速转变,这些干预措施可能永远是我们不断变化的世界的重要组成部分。