UK Nurses Delivering Physical Activity Advice: What Are the Challenges and Possible Solutions? A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participant Characteristics
3.2. Themes from Thematic Analysis
3.2.1. Theme 1: Nurses Intrinsic Barriers
3.2.2. Theme 2: Extrinsic Barriers to Delivering PA Advice
3.2.3. Theme 3: Increasing Staff Awareness of PA Guidelines
3.2.4. Theme 4: Optimising PA Advice Delivery
4. Discussion
4.1. Barriers
4.2. Solutions
4.3. Study Strengths and Limitations
4.4. Future Research Directions
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- [Thank the participant for attending the interview]
- [Participant to have read the PIS and consent form, and returned a completed copy of the consent to the researcher prior to the interview]
- [Researcher and participant to introduce themselves. Researcher to introduce the evaluation and the purpose of the interview]
- [Reiterate that the information participants provide will be anonymised and confidential. Check that the participant is comfortable with the interview being recorded]
- In this interview, I am interested in hearing about your experiences of delivering physical activity guidance to a patient, your opinion as a clinical expert in PA on the barriers, challenges and solutions to improving health care professionals given PA advice and views on current interventions/developments.
- Please be assured that you will remain anonymous and the research team will not share your comments with anyone else, so be as honest as you can. If there are any questions that you would prefer not to answer you do not have to answer them. If at any point you do not understand what I am asking or need some clarification, please feel free to ask as we go along. You will be given an opportunity to say anything that we have not covered at the end of the interview
- Do you have any questions about the interview before we begin?
- State your role, experience and current location of work (primary or secondary care)
- What is your speciality/discipline?
- How many years experience post graduation do you have?
- Currently meeting the CMO PA guidelines of 150 min moderate/75 min vigorous or combination of both.
- Currently doing some PA 30 min moderate physical activity (MPA), but not meeting CMO PA guidelines of 150 min moderate/75 min vigorous or combination of both.
- Currently doing less than 30 min MPA.
- How long did it take.
- Development;
- How much time?
- Knowledge of PA guidelines;
- Feelings/confidence around delivering CMO PA guidance;
- Why? Confidence—is it their role?
- [Explore who delivers guidance, whether part of standard procedure or ad hoc, whether content of guidance is general advice or adheres to guidelines;
- Why this approach;
- What they think of this approach;
- What individuals/practice could do differently;
- What works well and why?
- What needs to change for this to happen;
- Signposting, etc.]
- Given an Example.
- What works well and why?
- What works less well?
- [Explore what they do well and would share with their fellow colleagues as something that is exemplar practice]
- Prompts here, time, resources, partnerships with providers, better training, other people I could refer to in house, policy commitment for PA promotion.
- Prompts here-Consider intrinsic and extrinsic
- What works why and how?
- And what works less well and why?
- Should we not even bother recruiting those HCPs who are less enthusiastic, yes or no and why?
- Prompts
- Infographics;
- PA training;
- Mentoring;
- What works well and why?
- Consider delivery type/method, scalability, consider assessment.
- Consider: Policy, Motivating Practices, clinicians.
- Why is this?
- If yes—how do you use it?
- What else would you like to see in the guidelines?
- Prompts: 24 h message, inclusion of guidelines on sleep and PA, specific diseases, other groups?
- Prompts: CMO PA Guidelines communication strategy;
- A campaign with TV, radio, social media advertising;
- Better resourcing to support the campaign;
- Inclusion of communication experts on different platforms;
- Coordinated approach with other health issues.
- Do you know about MM?
- MM is an online suite of resources that provide time specific consultations for HCP across 11 conditions.
- Do you currently use moving medicine resources?
- If you do use it, how do you use it?
- If you don’t use it, why not?
- What works well and why?
- What does not work well and why?
- Content, coverage, access, style?
- In your opinion, what could be improved about moving medicine to make it more fit for your purpose as a clinician?
- [Thank the participant and remind them of the contact details on the PIS should they have any questions, want to request a lay summary, etc.]
References
- Qiu, Y.; Fernández-García, B.; Lehmann, H.I.; Li, G.; Kroemer, G.; López-Otín, C.; Xiao, J. Exercise sustains the hallmarks of health. J. Sport Health Sci. 2023, 12, 8–35. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Warburton, D.E.R.; Bredin, S.S.D. Health benefits of physical activity: A systematic review of current systematic reviews. Curr. Opin. Cardiol. 2017, 32, 541–556. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Department of Health and Social Care; Llwodraeth Cymru Welsh Government; Department of Health Northern Ireland and the Scottish Government. UK Chief Medical Officers’ Physical Activity Guidelines; Open Government Licence: London, UK, 2019.
- Sport England. Active Lives Adult Survey November 2021–2022 Report; Sport England: Loughborough, UK, 2023. [Google Scholar]
- Kokkinos, P. Physical activity, health benefits, and mortality risk. ISRN Cardiol. 2012, 2012, 718789. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Saxena, S.; Van Ommeren, M.; Tang, K.C.; Armstrong, T.P. Mental health benefits of physical activity. J. Ment. Health 2005, 14, 445–451. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chekroud, S.R.; Gueorguieva, R.; Zheutlin, A.B.; Paulus, M.; Krumholz, H.M.; Krystal, J.H.; Chekroud, A.M. Association between physical exercise and mental health in 1·2 million individuals in the USA between 2011 and 2015: A cross-sectional study. Lancet Psychiatry 2018, 5, 739–746. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- NHS Digital. Statistics on Obesity, Physical Activity and Diet, England 2021. Available online: https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/statistics-on-public-health/2021 (accessed on 19 September 2023).
- British Medical Association. Health Funding Data Analysis. Available online: https://www.bma.org.uk/advice-and-support/nhs-delivery-and-workforce/funding/health-funding-data-analysis (accessed on 15 September 2023).
- Kass, L.; Desai, T.; Sullivan, K.; Muniz, D.; Wells, A. Changes to Physical Activity, Sitting Time, Eating Behaviours and Barriers to Exercise during the First COVID-19 ‘Lockdown’ in an English Cohort. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 10025. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Jacob, L.; Tully, M.A.; Barnett, Y.; Lopez-Sanchez, G.F.; Butler, L.; Schuch, F.; López-Bueno, R.; McDermott, D.; Firth, J.; Grabovac, I.; et al. The relationship between physical activity and mental health in a sample of the UK public: A cross-sectional study during the implementation of COVID-19 social distancing measures. Ment. Health Phys. Act. 2020, 19, 100345. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Carrick, J. Promoting the Role of the Nursing Workforce in Primary Care; NHS: London, UK, 2023.
- Coutts, A. The Nurse’s Role in Providing Strategies and Advice on Weight Management. Available online: https://www.britishjournalofnursing.com/content/weight-management/the-nurses-role-in-providing-strategies-and-advice-on-weight-management (accessed on 19 September 2023).
- Buchan, J.; Charlesworth, A.; Gershlick, B.; Seccombe, I.J. A Critical Moment: NHS Staffing Trends, Retention and Attrition; Health Foundation: London, UK, 2019. [Google Scholar]
- Public Health England, N. Making Every Contact Count (MECC): Consensus Statement; NHS: London, UK, 2016.
- Stead, A.; Vishnubala, D.; Marino, K.R.; Iqbal, A.; Pringle, A.; Nykjaer, C. UK physiotherapists delivering physical activity advice: What are the challenges and possible solutions? A qualitative study. J. BMJ Open 2023, 13, e069372. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Vishnubala, D.; Iqbal, A.; Marino, K.; Whatmough, S.; Barker, R.; Salman, D.; Bazira, P.; Finn, G.; Pringle, A.; Nykjaer, C. UK Doctors Delivering Physical Activity Advice: What Are the Challenges and Possible Solutions? A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 12030. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Knapik, M. The Qualitative Research Interview: Participants’ Responsive Participation in Knowledge Making. Sage J. 2006, 5, 77–93. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- O’Brien, B.C.; Harris, I.B.; Beckman, T.J.; Reed, D.A.; Cook, D.A. Standards for reporting qualitative research: A synthesis of recommendations. Acad. Med. J. Assoc. Am. Med. Coll. 2014, 89, 1245–1251. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Braun, V.; Clarke, V. Using thematic analysis in psychology. Qual. Res. Psychol. 2006, 3, 77–101. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Polkinghorne, M.; Taylor, J. Recursive Abstraction Method for Analysing Qualitative Data. In Encyclopedia of Tourism Management and Marketing; Edward Elgar Publishing: Cheltenham, UK, 2022; pp. 636–638. [Google Scholar]
- Saunders, B.; Sim, J.; Kingstone, T.; Baker, S.; Waterfield, J.; Bartlam, B.; Burroughs, H.; Jinks, C. Saturation in qualitative research: Exploring its conceptualization and operationalization. Qual. Quant. 2018, 52, 1893–1907. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bazeley, P. Analysing qualitative data: More than ‘identifying themes’. Malays. J. Qual. Res. 2009, 2, 1–17. [Google Scholar]
- Tsiga, E.; Panagopoulou, E.; Sevdalis, N.; Montgomery, A.; Benos, A. The influence of time pressure on adherence to guidelines in primary care: An experimental study. J. BMJ Open 2013, 3, e002700. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Rashid, C. Benefits and limitations of nurses taking on aspects of the clinical role of doctors in primary care: Integrative literature review. J. Adv. Nurs. 2010, 66, 1658–1670. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Nursing and Midwifery Council. Future Nurse: Standards of Proficiency for Registered Nurses; Nursing and Midwifery Council: London, UK, 2018. [Google Scholar]
- Pandya, T.; Marino, K. Embedding sports and exercise medicine into the medical curriculum; a call for inclusion. BMC Med. Educ. 2018, 18, 306. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- De Vivo, M.; Mills, H. “They turn to you first for everything”: Insights into midwives’ perspectives of providing physical activity advice and guidance to pregnant women. BMC Pregnancy Childbirth 2019, 19, 462. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Walsh, K.; Grech, C.; Hill, K. Health advice and education given to overweight patients by primary care doctors and nurses: A scoping literature review. Prev. Med. Rep. 2019, 14, 100812. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- NHS Employers. Employee Recognition. Available online: https://www.nhsemployers.org/articles/employee-recognition (accessed on 15 September 2023).
- NHS England Digital. Quality and Outcomes Framework, 2020–2021. Available online: https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/quality-and-outcomes-framework-achievement-prevalence-and-exceptions-data/2020-21#highlights (accessed on 15 September 2023).
- Connabeer, K. Lifestyle advice in UK Primary Care consultations: Doctors’ use of conditional forms of advice. Patient Educ. Couns. 2021, 104, 2706–2715. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chatterjee, R.; Chapman, T.; Brannan, M.G.; Varney, J. GPs’ knowledge, use, and confidence in national physical activity and health guidelines and tools: A questionnaire-based survey of general practice in England. Br. J. Gen. Pract. J. R. Coll. Gen. Pract. 2017, 67, e668–e675. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Belfrage, A.S.V.; Grotmol, K.S.; Tyssen, R.; Moum, T.; Finset, A.; Isaksson Rø, K.; Lien, L. Factors influencing doctors’ counselling on patients’ lifestyle habits: A cohort study. BJGP Open 2018, 2, bjgpopen18X101607. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- NHS Improvement. Spoken Communication and Patient Safety in the NHS: Summary of the Research Findings; NHS: London, UK, 2018.
- Selvaraj, C.S.; Abdullah, N. Physically active primary care doctors are more likely to offer exercise counselling to patients with cardiovascular diseases: A cross-sectional study. BMC Prim. Care 2022, 23, 59. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Schofield, B.; Rolfe, U.; McClean, S.; Hoskins, R.; Voss, S.; Benger, J. What are the barriers and facilitators to effective health promotion in urgent and emergency care? A systematic review. BMC Emerg. Med. 2022, 22, 95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Health Education England. Staff Benefits. Available online: https://www.hee.nhs.uk/about-hee/work-us/staff-benefits (accessed on 15 September 2023).
- PMV Live. NHS Intranets Are a ‘Valuable Clinical and Professional Resource’. Available online: https://www.pmlive.com/digital_handbook/pharma_and_digital/digital_marketing/nhs_intranets_are_a_valuable_clinical_and_professional_resource (accessed on 15 September 2023).
- Fagerlin, A.; Zikmund-Fisher, B.J.; Ubel, P.A. Helping Patients Decide: Ten Steps to Better Risk Communication. JNCI J. Natl. Cancer Inst. 2011, 103, 1436–1443. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Characteristic | Category | N (%) |
---|---|---|
Work experience (years) | ||
1–5 | 2 (15.4) | |
6–10 | 7 (53.8) | |
11+ | 4 (30.8) | |
Job role | ||
Staff Nurse | 7 (53.8) | |
Clinical Research Nurse | 2 (15.4) | |
Health Visitor | 1 (7.7) | |
Practice Nurse | 2 (15.4) | |
Senior Public Health Nurse | 1 (7.7) | |
Field | ||
Cardiology | 1 (7.7) | |
Cardiothoracic intensive care | 1 (7.7) | |
Gastroenterology | 1 (7.7) | |
Oncology | 1 (7.7) | |
COVID assessment wards | 1 (7.7) | |
Paediatrics | 2 (15.4) | |
Public Health | 1 (7.7) | |
Research Trials | 2 (15.4) | |
Undisclosed | 3 (23.1) | |
UK Region | ||
West Midlands | 3 (23.1) | |
Yorkshire and the Humber | 2 (15.0) | |
Southwest | 1 (7.7) | |
Scotland | 3 (23.1) | |
Undisclosed | 4 (30.7) | |
Aware of CMO’s PA guidelines | ||
Yes | 3 (23.1) | |
No | 10 (76.9) | |
Aware of the 2019 PA guideline update | ||
Yes | 1 (7.7) | |
No | 12 (92.3) | |
Meeting CMO’s PA guidelines for aerobic activity | ||
Yes | 12 (92.3) | |
No | 1 (7.7) | |
Aware of Moving Medicine | ||
Yes | 2 (15.4) | |
No | 11 (84.6) |
Theme | Subtheme |
---|---|
1—Nurses’ intrinsic barriers to delivering PA advice | Lack of knowledge of PA guidelines |
PA is often an afterthought | |
Compartmentalisation | |
Nurse’s guilt | |
2—Nurses’ extrinsic barriers to delivering PA advice | Lack of formal PA education |
Time pressures | |
Patient engagement | |
3—Increasing staff awareness of PA guidelines | Staff training |
Incorporating PA learning via policy | |
Encouraging staff to be active | |
4—Optimising PA advice delivery | Individualised PA advice |
Piecemeal Approach | |
Interdisciplinary team approach | |
Local exercise services and schemes | |
Utilising online and visual resources |
Sub-Theme | Example Quotes |
---|---|
Lack of knowledge of PA guidelines | “I’d just be encouraging gentle exercise like walking and nothing that could potentially cause fractures or injury, but because my knowledge isn’t great in terms of exercise and what would be safe and what wouldn’t be, I’d probably be more cautious and tell people to avoid things that could cause them injury.” (Participant 4) “What I find quite difficult is that with every subject you have a little bit of knowledge and then you can go and find out more yourself. Yeah, and things change all the time as well. It’s not like, you know, there’s one initiative in. The next time you try implement it, it’s like actually that’s changed now.” (Participant 13) |
PA is often an afterthought | “We may well have covered it, but it isn’t something that I’ve retained.” (Participant 10) |
Compartmentalisation | “Confidence, I would say. I also think that we’ve become quite compartmentalised in our roles.” (Participant 11) “I’ve had this conversation with colleagues before. It seems like as nurses, we now feel, or can feel that is the physios’ job to give the exercise advice, and it’s the dietitian’s job to give the nutrition advice.” (Participant 5) |
Nurses’ guilt | “There’s nothing worse than nurses’ guilt when they’ve just sat there and they’ve been like, ‘Oh I’ve done that’, or, ’That’s actually been detrimental to my patient if I made it push them harder’.” (Participant 3) |
Subtheme | Example Quotes |
---|---|
Lack of formal PA education | “I don’t think I’ve really received an awful lot in terms of a lecture or an actual discussion.” (Participant 3) “I don’t remember anything from university really, in terms of education and educating patients. Yes, I guess it needs to be more ingrained in everything rather than one module that you do as a whole.” (Participant 4) |
Time constraints | “I know a lot of my colleagues are a bit averse to bringing in more things and they think, oh, it’s another thing that we need to talk about. It’s another health promotion topic. I guess that can be a barrier, but I think time constraints is the biggest barrier and just trying to fit it all in.” (Participant 5) “How do they get stuff done? It’s very difficult to get them doing even day training or two-hour training.” (Participant 12) |
Insufficient CPD training | “Even in my current role, we’ve never had any training at all in delivering advice for physical activity and stuff.” (Participant 1) “I don’t feel it’s something that we have a lot of training on. Although it’s something that everyone knows we should do, it doesn’t always mean people are doing it. Yes, I think more education is needed. Even in our nursing training I don’t feel we had lots of it We need more education for nursing staff to then make sure they’re confident enough to pass it on to the patients.” (Participant 2) |
Patient engagement | “Some patients don’t take their illnesses very seriously.” (Participant 1) “We have a lot of patients who are younger and able to mobilize well, so we do make a point of encouraging them to go for walks around the wards or go for a walk around the hospital, or encourage them to do that quickly rather than—especially because they’re young and fit physically.” (Participant 2) |
Subtheme | Example Quotes |
---|---|
Staff training | “We don’t really get enough training. I think maybe it’s because it’s so different, person to person, they don’t really know where to start. I don’t know if that’s wrong for me to say or not, but there’s maybe not specific guidance because you can’t specify physical activity person to person because it’s so varied.” (Participant 3) “Healthcare professionals going out training into a clinical area is the only way you can get staff trained. Getting staff off wards for any sort of training is a struggle and you really struggle to get people off wards.” (Participant 12) |
Incorporating PA learning via policy | “Maybe even having a small program, a small e-learning module that takes 10 min that is—I know it’s totally out there but like included in your mandatory learning so that people will have to do it because it’s in your mandatories.” (Participant 1) “I suppose if they bring in policies, then if people get more information about it and if there are care plans or something that makes us aware of that, then, like I say, either part of the admission pack or part of the discharge planning.” (Participant 2) |
Encouraging staff to be active | “I think in things like the Cycle to Work scheme and I know that some of the NHS discounts on gyms and leisure centres and things, there’s more accessibility and encouragement for staff.” (Participant 5) “As healthcare providers, what are we actually doing to encourage our own staff to be active and to keep healthy? If they see us as a big employer, as a trust actually supporting staff to be healthy and sort of making sure that they know it’s good for them to actually be physically active not only for their own health physically, but also for their mental health. I think it’s also as a trust, being mindful of the fact that we should be sort of encouraging our own staff to think about their own.” (Participant 12) |
Subtheme | Example Quotes |
---|---|
Individualised PA advice | “He was running ultra-marathons before he had an MI. He was out doing a training run when he arrested. I was talking to him because I’m a runner as well. For him, he was talking about whether or not he’d be able to do the West Highland Way race again, and I was like, “Just take it gently, build up”, and so for him I adapted, I was able to have a full conversation with him about exercise.” (Participant 1) “Sometimes I feel if you have a discussion about it as well as maybe giving them a leaflet with the exercises system, I feel that would be more beneficial to have the conversation to go with it.” (Participant 3) |
Piecemeal approach | “If people realised how little it is—even just being like, we’ll say we’ll do the minimum. We’ll do the 150 min, if you do that for a week and then they realise I’ve done over that or I’m so close to doing that anyway, then that might encourage people to actually do it. I think a lot of people don’t know that’s the guidelines. I certainly didn’t until I got my new watch. I think the more people you make aware of, so advertising it on social media that this is the guidelines. I think just doing it randomly doesn’t really help because I think if you make a big deal about it.” (Participant 1) “I just think of somebody who’s quite inactive, whereas if you maybe broke it down into a day by day, ‘This is what options you could do’, I think you’re probably going to have a better outcome than just giving them, ‘This is the amount of minutes that we want you to do’.” (Participant 3) |
Interdisciplinary team approach | “As a nurse it would be important to be involved by making more of an interdisciplinary team approach; a discussion with a doctor and what they think would be suitable as well as the physios.” (Participant 3) “I guess more support from other health professionals might be helpful, more education. There’s definitely not enough focus on tackling the root of the issue.” (Participant 4) |
Local exercise services and schemes | “I think asking what they do already or what they’d be interested in doing. I think trying to ascertain what their resources are available for exercise. If financially they don’t have money or access to gyms or swimming pools or wherever, encouraging things like walking or running if they’re interested, and then if they do have money to spend on things, then what would they be able to commit to?” (Participant 5) |
Utilising online and visual resources | “Maybe having information. If patients are keen to find out that sort of stuff, having information leaflets that they can take home themselves. Promotion on television and radio and stuff is also always beneficial.” (Participant 2) “A lot of the trusts have their own Facebook pages. Like Facebook, they have so many followers, they basically have their whole—it’s not even just NHS workers that are in that. If you put on there the information, I think it would get seen by lots of people and with pictures” (Participant 7) |
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Raghavan, A.; Vishnubala, D.; Iqbal, A.; Hunter, R.; Marino, K.; Eastwood, D.; Nykjaer, C.; Pringle, A. UK Nurses Delivering Physical Activity Advice: What Are the Challenges and Possible Solutions? A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 7113. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20237113
Raghavan A, Vishnubala D, Iqbal A, Hunter R, Marino K, Eastwood D, Nykjaer C, Pringle A. UK Nurses Delivering Physical Activity Advice: What Are the Challenges and Possible Solutions? A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(23):7113. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20237113
Chicago/Turabian StyleRaghavan, Anoop, Dane Vishnubala, Adil Iqbal, Ruth Hunter, Katherine Marino, David Eastwood, Camilla Nykjaer, and Andy Pringle. 2023. "UK Nurses Delivering Physical Activity Advice: What Are the Challenges and Possible Solutions? A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 23: 7113. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20237113
APA StyleRaghavan, A., Vishnubala, D., Iqbal, A., Hunter, R., Marino, K., Eastwood, D., Nykjaer, C., & Pringle, A. (2023). UK Nurses Delivering Physical Activity Advice: What Are the Challenges and Possible Solutions? A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(23), 7113. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20237113