Barriers and Enablers to a Hospital-to-Home, Combined Exercise and Nutrition, Self-Managed Program for Pre-Frail and Frail Hospitalised Older Adults

Author:

Han Chad Yixian1ORCID,Middleton Georgia1ORCID,Doh Jersyn1,Yaxley Alison1ORCID,Sharma Yogesh23ORCID,Baldwin Claire1ORCID,Miller Michelle1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Caring Futures Institute, College of Nursing and Health Science, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA 5042, Australia

2. College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA 5042, Australia

3. Department of General Medicine, Flinders Medical Centre, Adelaide, SA 5042, Australia

Abstract

Introduction: Self-managed exercise and nutrition interventions can alleviate pre-frailty and frailty but understanding of adherence to them is lacking. This study aimed to explore the experiences of, and barriers and enablers to, a hospital-to-home self-managed combined exercise and nutrition program for hospitalised older adults living with pre-frailty and frailty. Methods: A hybrid approach to data- and theory-driven descriptive thematic analysis identified experiences, barriers, and enablers to participation in a 3-month, self-managed, exercise–nutrition, hospital-to-home frailty-support program. Pre-frail and frail older adult patients ≥ 65 years admitted to the acute medical unit at a South Australian tertiary hospital were recruited. Individual semi-structured interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed descriptively, using the Theoretical Domains Framework. Results: The nutrition component of the program found 11 common barriers and 18 common enablers. The exercise component included 14 barriers and 24 enablers. Intentions, Social influences, Environmental context/resource and Emotions served as primary barriers towards adherence to both components. Common enablers for both components included Knowledge, Social identity, Environmental context/resource, Social influences, and Emotions. Conclusions: This research revealed important factors affecting adherence to a self-managed exercise–nutrition program in pre-frail and frail older adults within the environment, resources, and emotion domains that should be considered when designing other intervention programs in this population group.

Funder

Flinders University’s College of Nursing and Health Sciences Research Student Maintenance and the Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship

Flinders Medical Centre, Southern Adelaide Local Health Network

Publisher

MDPI AG

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