Barriers and Enablers to a Hospital-to-Home, Combined Exercise and Nutrition, Self-Managed Program for Pre-Frail and Frail Hospitalised Older Adults
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.1.1. Theoretical Framework
2.1.2. Demonstrating Trustworthiness and Rigour
2.1.3. Design of Interview Protocol
- Experience of program—what were their overall feelings and opinions towards the program?
- Barriers and enablers to diet—what helped or deterred them from adhering to the diet recommendations/changes?
- Barriers and enablers to exercise—what helped or deterred them from adhering to the exercises prescribed?
2.2. Settings and Participants
2.3. Procedure
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participants
3.2. Experience of the INDEPENDENCE Program
3.3. Barriers to the Self-Managed, Exercise/Nutrition, Hospital-to-Home Program
3.4. Enablers to the Self-Managed, Exercise/Nutrition, Hospital-to-Home Program
4. Discussion
4.1. Knowledge and Skills
4.2. Environmental Context and Resources
4.3. Social Influences
4.4. Emotion
4.5. Strength and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | Interview Cohort (n = 11) |
---|---|
Age, years, mean ± SD | 80.4 ± 6.3 |
Female, n (%) | 7 (64%) |
BMI a, kg/m2, mean ± SD | 26.1 ± 6.2 |
MMSE score b, mean ± SD | 28.3 ± 1.4 |
Charlson Comorbidity Index, mean ± SD | 4.6 ± 1.7 |
Tertiary education level | 3 (27%) |
Living alone | 6 (55%) |
Mean Edmonton Frail Scale | 8.9 ± 1.9 |
Pre-frail | 2 (18%) |
Frail | 9 (82%) |
PG-SGA grade—Malnourished, n (%) | 6 (55%) |
Scored PG-SGA, mean ± SD | 7.9 ± 3.8 |
Short Physical Performance Battery, mean ± SD | 2.6 ± 1.8 |
Geriatric Depression Scale, mean ± SD | 5.6 ± 3.6 |
EQ-5D-5L Utility Index c, mean ± SD | 0.37 ± 0.37 |
EQ-5D VAS d, mean ± SD | 61.6 ± 23.9 |
TDF Domain | Codes | Illustrative Quotations |
---|---|---|
Knowledge | Increased awareness about lifestyle behaviours | “I’ve not thought so much about diet, so it made me think about diet a little bit more on what I was eating in in terms of exercise, because I was fairly active before the exercise component.” “I think the benefit the benefit is mainly being that I become more diet conscious.” |
Social identity | Participant of a program | “I just think it was really helpful that I that [name of therapist] invited me to connect into this program, it’s been really helpful.” |
Beliefs about capabilities | Perceived lack of ability to participate | “Well, all my life I was born with a muscle weakness yes. And all my life was a struggle.” “I’m so sorry to say and I just can’t do it because I enjoy his visits and his advice, but I can’t do it.” |
Optimism | Optimism about effects of program | “Getting used to eating and have regular meals. That was the most important thing for me and be able to walk again and to move again.” |
Reinforcement | Reward of getting back to pre-hospitalised activities | “I did get back to you know, sorting out some stamps and picked up my ukulele and trying to get back in things.” |
Environmental context/resource | Disruptions to program by readmissions | “Yeah, yeah, in admissions into hospital ‘cause I injured my leg then I’ve had that funny thing that grew on the top of my foot and so it interrupted it all. It wasn’t a continuous flow.” |
Lack of time for program | “I didn’t expect that when I came out of hospital, I thought I was going to have time.” | |
Positive affect for home visits | “I think the home visits have been very helpful.” | |
Flexibility of program | “Yeah, I like that arrangement. I looked in my on the weekend. I looked in my diary for today and I thought, oh yes, three o’clock OK, I just like that planning ahead thing that.” | |
Social influence | Individualised support | “This was more personal. You know the help that you I get at each time that [name of home therapist] came out. And then I am improved as I went on.” “But [name of therapist] is beautiful, I love to participate in the program. He is a beautiful person, and he brings it in. Acceptable they and I have really appreciated him.” |
Behavioural regulation | Habit forming | “I’m quite happy to do them. And try to do them at least before 2 meals.” |
TDF Domain | Codes | Illustrative Quotations |
---|---|---|
Beliefs about capabilities | Lack of coordination and balance (E) | “I can’t stand on my feet very well” |
Intentions | Lack of motivation to cook (N) | “Only laziness” “Or I don’t feel like cooking” |
Lack of internal motivation (E) | “I didn’t have the motivation to do it” “I don’t think I have much motivation” | |
Memory, attention, and decision processes | Forgetfulness (E) | “It just doesn’t come up. I don’t think about it. A lot of the times that I should be doing it.” |
Environmental context/resource | Dietary restrictions from multimorbidity (N) | “I’ve got to stick virtually the three different diets don’t I low sodium gout diet and potassium diet, don’t I, you know?” |
Side effect from medications/treatments (N) | “When they give me the first injection, I was sick in the stomach. I couldn’t eat. I had to force myself to eat” | |
Limited transport (N) | “If I forget something or if I feel like something I can’t get it because there’s no way really. Well, there’s no transport around here” | |
Physical limitation to prepare food (N) | “Yeah, the rheumatoid yeah. I’m only you know if I go to lift the pan or a sauce pan up, I find it very hard.” | |
Cold/wet weather (E) | “Too cold and wet….and when it’s wet, I don’t go out for a sweat” “Right now, cold weather” | |
Comorbidities and injuries (E) | “Itch… it’s constant. I didn’t get any sleep. So, you know it was very hard you see. It consumed my life.” | |
Lack of sleep (E) | “You know and lack of sleep.” | |
Lack of energy (E) | “No, yeah, well I was tired. So tired.” | |
Lack of time (E) | “The simple answer is time… you know, routines even within the house. And the day just never seems long enough” | |
Social influence | Loneliness (N) | “Eating alone, I think I’ve told you haven’t heard that. My husband had restaurants and yes, and I’m, you know, always get stuff cooked for me and then you know I go into the restaurant and if he’s got people that are coming in, I sit down and eat with them. And yeah, yeah so” |
Peer pressure (N) | “The only thing that interferes with me doing it is it I go out and put people like people asking me out. And give me a meal I feel obliged to eat what they put in front of me” | |
Prioritising social activities over exercise (E) | “If I get an invitation to go out somewhere with somebody, I’ll drop the exercise and go out.” | |
Emotion | Lack of enjoyment (N) | “I put pressure on myself to eat something and I used to be a good eater. Uh, food used to be celebration for me and now food is a punishment” ‘I still have trouble tasting. I don’t get the nice time able to drink tea now.” |
Fear of insufficient funds (N) | “I was afraid that my money wouldn’t go as far as I needed it to go, but it was just unreasonable fear.” | |
Lack of appetite (N) | “Oh, especially now sometimes I just don’t feel hungry at all. But I’m forcing myself to eat.” | |
Depressive/anxious mood (N) (E) | “Now I hate getting out. I just like staying in my bed. I think the earlier I get up, the longer the day is.” “All depression and anxiety” | |
Stress from dealing with physical ailments (E) | “Pain, yeah. Just the pain that it caused me and then. I have to do it in the kitchen because I can hold on to the bench and then I can’t get back, but there’s only so much pain here” | |
Fear from pending diagnosis (E) | “I was waiting to get the results. From this these tests. No, no waiting for them to give me the green light so that I didn’t overdo it” | |
Behavioural regulation | Not part of daily routine (E) | “Yeah, I just never thought of it. Perhaps that day.” |
TDF Domain | Codes | Illustrative Quotations |
---|---|---|
Knowledge | Improved awareness and knowledge of food and health (E) | “what the program did was made me look at what we were preparing or what was on the plate. And making sure that we had a good balance of food but with a bias towards the proteins.” “Yeah, I’ll make sure I put some protein in it” |
Increased importance of protein (N) | “Yeah, I’ll make sure I put some protein in it” | |
Increased awareness of importance to not stay sedentary (E) | “I’m more aware that I’m sitting. I need to move. Yeah, yeah. So I am more aware of that, yes?” | |
Skills | Consistent dietary advice from healthcare staff across services (N) | “I think it was seamless from the hospital and you and my GP. And before I think I was using water. So, to put the sustagen, mix it with water.” “Right, yeah, well understand about the portions bit better from (home visit therapist).” |
Portioning of food (N) | “Right, yeah, well understand about the portions bit better from (home visit therapist).” | |
Less reliant on gait aids (E) | “at times I don’t even use the Walker or, you know I can open if I’ve got something to grab on that I can. Do that” “I don’t find it difficult at all.” “You’ve explained yourself so well, and I haven’t felt. The need to call you” | |
Level of difficulty of home exercises were manageable (E) | “I don’t find it difficult at all.” | |
Learnt skill from healthcare provider (E) | “You’ve explained yourself so well, and I haven’t felt. The need to call you” | |
Social identity | Caregiver to others (N) | “Yeah, it’s. She has dementia. So, it’s where she needs me badly” |
Participant of a program (E) | “I thought, you know, I’ve started it. I’ve got to finish it.” | |
Independent person/parent (E) | “As I say. Some people expect their child to be there every five minutes, and that’s just not the way that we are... I just think sometimes that some parents think expect too much of their children because they’ve got their own lives. They’ve got their own family to look after. So there. You really should. Be stronger and more independent.” | |
Worthy patient (E) | “They said that they see me see me as his old. He is a patient worth working on. Otherwise, once you get over 80, they’re not interested” | |
Beliefs about capabilities | Perceived competence from previous program (E) | “I mean just doing them more often and you know I’ve always done a lot of walking anyway. You know but haven’t necessarily done all the other things.” |
Optimism | Trust and confidence in healthcare provider (N) | “Yeah, and I respected the fact, I suppose that [therapist] done that. [therapist] have done the hard yards and got qualification in it” |
Confidence in prescribed exercises (E) | “I think the answer is the exercises when they’re given by an external organisation rather than me just thinking them up myself. You know, they have been developed for a reason.” | |
Optimism of increasing physical capabilities (E) | “This though, because I think I might get better” “I’ve liked doing the exercise to getting out and seeing what I can do.” | |
Beliefs about consequences | Perception that nutrition will improve weight/strength (N) | “Realising that I had to work on the dietary program, but I did find having lost 12 kilos in weight between going to hospital and coming out the [hospital].” |
Perception that nutrition can improve blood glucose (N) | “That’s an obvious improvement. Which is helping with the BGL, because that’s coming down.” | |
Perception that exercise will maintain or improve strength/health (E) | “I know if I don’t keep the exercise up that my strengths not going to come back, you know. So, I’ve tried to do them when I can, yeah” “And I knew it was going to build up stamina and give me strength again. So there was a big incentive” | |
Perception that exercise helped maintain independence (E) | “Well, I like to keep fit to a certain extent. I’m on my own so I have to do things for myself. Yes, that’s how I try to keep fit to enable me to do them” | |
Perception that exercise will improve appetite (E) | “I’m underweight and I feel that it may improve my appetite with the exercises” | |
Accountability to health-support workers (E) | “I think when you realise that you have some supervision, you have some external help. These sorts of things are motivators as well that you know you are wanting to do it for yourself, but you’re wanting to do it for the tutor so that they can see the benefit of their work and their recommendations” | |
Fall prevention (E) | “Actually, we’re keeping the lower body very strong, which enables us not to fall over, which is the whole idea.” | |
Reinforcement | Exercise-induced appetite (N) | “I felt with the exercise it did give me a little more appetite than I had before” |
Mental benefits (N) | “Because I’m I feel better.” | |
Physical/health benefits (E) | “Yeah and getting up out of the chair. A great deal” “These simple exercises done around the chair and their added weight in nature. Uhm, they have more effect on the weight control and the sugar control than what the other exercises I do.” | |
Intentions | Intrinsic motivation (E) | “I say to myself, I’ve got to do them, and I do them.” “My own will power” “Sometimes if I’m busy or going to be busy. I’ll just go along a walk up on the block that went along halls. You know?” |
Constant decision to stay active (E) | “Sometimes if I’m busy or going to be busy. I’ll just go along a walk up on the block that went along halls. You know?” | |
Goals | Weight gain (N) | “I’ve got the scales in the bathroom. I weigh myself every morning when I get out of the chair and I’m just hoping to see that. It’s really not. Yeah. Get up a little bit more than it has” |
To reclaim life prior to hospitalisation (E) | “You, well, you know I wanted to, you know, resume my life and start instead of watching the church service on the tablet that I could go back to church as well, you know” | |
Memory, attention, and decision processes | No reliance on memory for exercises (E) | “The fact that all the exercises are illustrated so that you can’t make a mistake because you can see it.” |
Environmental context/resource | Government funding (N) | “No, it [government funding support] helps me because something go out shopping, buy anything I want, you know” |
Meal-delivery service (N) | “Well, you know I was on light and easy (pre-prepared meal program)” | |
Education resource booklet (E) (N) | “Yeah, like it’s you know I try to refer to this book” “Well, I do the exercises in the book, but perhaps without I wouldn’t have done them so often” | |
Presence of outdoor facility (E) | “There’s an open-air gym down the road. There we go down there” | |
Social influences | Support from family (E) (N) | “[Daughter] suggested that she get high protein milk for the coffee because she said that’ll take care of two proteins straight away. So, then I only had to worry about 5.” |
Company of a spouse (N) | “I’m very lucky to still have my partner so someone I can talk to and eat with and prepare food with is very beneficial” “Must my wife and myself. And she was an in great Encourager all the time but she never really interfered with me” | |
Support from peers (N) | “Oh, people encouraging me and saying gosh, you’re looking good” | |
Support from healthcare providers (E) | “The very fact that [therapist] come here and we do what we do and then [therapist] ring up and we talk about what we talk about. It’s just that continual connection, yeah?.” | |
Emotions | Increased enjoyment in food/supplements (N) | “Well, it’s it seems to be taste here. It tastes smoother, Yes, yeah I do. I do like the protein drinks I really do like them” |
Behavioural regulation | Fitting exercises into daily routine (E) | “Trying to get the exercises in, especially when I get about to go out” “Yeah, I should get up in the morning after breakfast. Do my exercise, then get on with the rest of the day.” |
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© 2024 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/).
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Han, C.Y.; Middleton, G.; Doh, J.; Yaxley, A.; Sharma, Y.; Baldwin, C.; Miller, M. Barriers and Enablers to a Hospital-to-Home, Combined Exercise and Nutrition, Self-Managed Program for Pre-Frail and Frail Hospitalised Older Adults. Healthcare 2024, 12, 678. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12060678
Han CY, Middleton G, Doh J, Yaxley A, Sharma Y, Baldwin C, Miller M. Barriers and Enablers to a Hospital-to-Home, Combined Exercise and Nutrition, Self-Managed Program for Pre-Frail and Frail Hospitalised Older Adults. Healthcare. 2024; 12(6):678. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12060678
Chicago/Turabian StyleHan, Chad Yixian, Georgia Middleton, Jersyn Doh, Alison Yaxley, Yogesh Sharma, Claire Baldwin, and Michelle Miller. 2024. "Barriers and Enablers to a Hospital-to-Home, Combined Exercise and Nutrition, Self-Managed Program for Pre-Frail and Frail Hospitalised Older Adults" Healthcare 12, no. 6: 678. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12060678
APA StyleHan, C. Y., Middleton, G., Doh, J., Yaxley, A., Sharma, Y., Baldwin, C., & Miller, M. (2024). Barriers and Enablers to a Hospital-to-Home, Combined Exercise and Nutrition, Self-Managed Program for Pre-Frail and Frail Hospitalised Older Adults. Healthcare, 12(6), 678. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12060678