Technology-Based Motivation Support for Seniors’ Physical Activity—A Qualitative Study on Seniors’ and Health Care Professionals’ Views
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Ethical Considerations
2.3. Recruitement and Participants
2.3.1. Seniors
2.3.2. Health Care Professionals
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
2.5.1. Analysis of Seniors’ and HCPs’ Views Expressed in Focus Group Interviews
2.5.2. Analysis of Similarities and Differences in Views Expressed by Seniors and HCPs
3. Results
3.1. Focus Group Interviews
3.1.1. Seniors Views on Needs and Requirements on Technology-Based Motivation Support for PA
Surmountable
“That (a step counter) was not so fun. You needed to remember to put it on.”
“I think many people are afraid of technology. These things with credit cards and phones and people calling pretending to be…That strikes back on all technology in a way.”
Customizable
“Imagine that I came home one evening and when I sat down in front of the TV, sitting down there is something most people do anyway, and the first thing happening is that the screen asks me How am I today? What do I need to do to feel better?”
Helpful Facilitator
“But it is all the short distances you walk, if you summarize them every day. But that really adds up to something. Then you are adding on to the sum. That sounded a bit exciting”.
Conscious-Raising
“It might come as a shock, to see the amount of sedentary behavior this time of the year”.
Making Physical Activity Enjoyable
“We used to say that, for example, when we go bowling, that half of the amusement is the bowling and the other half is to get out and socialize with others. That is almost more important. For most of us it is at least more important than getting a good result”.
“But then you become motivated to do better in the next training session. I want to get thumbs up again.”
Useful for Organizations Reaching Inactive Persons
“If we [in the associations] had anything enabling us to attract for example 10–12 persons on our group walks instead of the seven persons that usually come, then we would have made an impact for those who really need the walks.”
3.1.2. HCPs’ Views on Needs and Requirements on Technology-Based Motivation Support for PA
Increasing Seniors’ Direct Motivation for PA
“It is still very much about understanding the aim and meaning of PA. Many persons think that a short walk with their dog is enough. But trying to make them realize that they need to increase and be active at another intensity is a challenge.”
“For the seniors we meet at the geriatric clinic, the main benefit might be just to be active during the day. Because an enormous amount of time is spent on nothing, people are very passive.”
Helping Seniors Overcome Hinderances to PA
“Among persons with weak balance that might have fallen. There is often, a not very much expressed, but a certain doubt to be active. And maybe above all else doubts, to be active by oneself.”
Increasing Senior’s Motivation for PA through Decreased Inactivity
“I guess many seniors think that they are worth sitting down, because they have worked and labored all their lives. And this I hear very often from older persons.”
“It is a form of help to self-help too. Then it might depend a lot on how you approach the person, how it is communicated.”
Attractive for Seniors
“My experience is that seniors used to say that they want to feel that they own the data themselves. That they want to have control of the information.”
Supporting the HCPs’ Clinical Work
“If we talk about a target group that needs rehabilitation in order to be activated, then it can be a real failure if you have a really bad day and are not able to do anything. In that situation, to get digital feedback saying today you have accomplished nothing. When instead I could already, from the start, lower my goal. Because then I might feel cheered up despite the bad day with low energy. Because I did something. And I think that is important.”
“I think that there is also a downside to this, a risk I can see is if the technology is used in order to replace any form of human contact. Especially when it comes to the oldest seniors with cognitive failure, then it is important to get another form of support, otherwise the technology will only become an obstacle.”
Facilitating Dialogue and Cooperation between Senior and Professional
“Seen to the work process of a physiotherapist, if you work with a patient for a longer period of time, it is always good to see if there has been an actual change. And in that sense, it might be difficult for some individuals to actually describe themselves if they have done something significantly different or not.”
“It might facilitate, I also think, if you are going to evaluate something. If you for example give the person an exercise program or a process and then the person says, ‘I have done a lot of training every day’, and then you see no progress. ‘Well, you haven’t been physically active according to this’. Then you can sort of discuss—is the lack of progress due to the fact that the exercises given are irrelevant or due to the low activity. So, it might facilitate our evaluation.”
3.2. Analysis of Similarities and Differences between Seniors’ and HCPs’ Views
3.2.1. Views on Possible Contributions from the Digital Technology in Supporting and Motivating Seniors to Increase PA
3.2.2. Views on Qualities that the Digital Technology-Based Motivational Support Should Have
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Supplementary File 1Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Appendix B
Appendix C
Appendix D
Appendix E
Appendix F
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Ehn, M.; Johansson, A.-C.; Revenäs, Å. Technology-Based Motivation Support for Seniors’ Physical Activity—A Qualitative Study on Seniors’ and Health Care Professionals’ Views. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 2418. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16132418
Ehn M, Johansson A-C, Revenäs Å. Technology-Based Motivation Support for Seniors’ Physical Activity—A Qualitative Study on Seniors’ and Health Care Professionals’ Views. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(13):2418. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16132418
Chicago/Turabian StyleEhn, Maria, Ann-Christin Johansson, and Åsa Revenäs. 2019. "Technology-Based Motivation Support for Seniors’ Physical Activity—A Qualitative Study on Seniors’ and Health Care Professionals’ Views" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 13: 2418. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16132418
APA StyleEhn, M., Johansson, A. -C., & Revenäs, Å. (2019). Technology-Based Motivation Support for Seniors’ Physical Activity—A Qualitative Study on Seniors’ and Health Care Professionals’ Views. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(13), 2418. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16132418