Barriers and Motivators to Being Physically Active for Older Home Care Clients

The aim of the study was to identify the motivators and barriers to being physically active for older people receiving either restorative or “usual” home care services. The study used a mixed method descriptive design including questionnaire and interviews. Questionnaires were sent to 1,490 clients...

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Main Authors: Burton, Elissa, Lewin, Gill, Boldy, Duncan
Format: Journal Article
Published: Informa Healthcare 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16153
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author Burton, Elissa
Lewin, Gill
Boldy, Duncan
author_facet Burton, Elissa
Lewin, Gill
Boldy, Duncan
author_sort Burton, Elissa
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The aim of the study was to identify the motivators and barriers to being physically active for older people receiving either restorative or “usual” home care services. The study used a mixed method descriptive design including questionnaire and interviews. Questionnaires were sent to 1,490 clients who received either service between 2006–2009; 506 (34%) responded, and 190 indicated willingness to participate in a follow-up interview. Of the latter, 20 were purposively selected and interviewed. “Well-being" and “health and fitness" were the top two reasons participants gave for being active. “Ongoing injury/illness" and feeling “too old" were the highest ranked barriers. The qualitative findings confirmed that older home care clients know physical activity is good for health and well-being, however, due to ongoing injury/illness and thinking they are too old, they may not be as active as they could be. This may impact on the number of home care services older people need over the longer term.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-161532017-09-13T15:03:20Z Barriers and Motivators to Being Physically Active for Older Home Care Clients Burton, Elissa Lewin, Gill Boldy, Duncan The aim of the study was to identify the motivators and barriers to being physically active for older people receiving either restorative or “usual” home care services. The study used a mixed method descriptive design including questionnaire and interviews. Questionnaires were sent to 1,490 clients who received either service between 2006–2009; 506 (34%) responded, and 190 indicated willingness to participate in a follow-up interview. Of the latter, 20 were purposively selected and interviewed. “Well-being" and “health and fitness" were the top two reasons participants gave for being active. “Ongoing injury/illness" and feeling “too old" were the highest ranked barriers. The qualitative findings confirmed that older home care clients know physical activity is good for health and well-being, however, due to ongoing injury/illness and thinking they are too old, they may not be as active as they could be. This may impact on the number of home care services older people need over the longer term. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16153 10.3109/02703181.2012.751474 Informa Healthcare restricted
spellingShingle Burton, Elissa
Lewin, Gill
Boldy, Duncan
Barriers and Motivators to Being Physically Active for Older Home Care Clients
title Barriers and Motivators to Being Physically Active for Older Home Care Clients
title_full Barriers and Motivators to Being Physically Active for Older Home Care Clients
title_fullStr Barriers and Motivators to Being Physically Active for Older Home Care Clients
title_full_unstemmed Barriers and Motivators to Being Physically Active for Older Home Care Clients
title_short Barriers and Motivators to Being Physically Active for Older Home Care Clients
title_sort barriers and motivators to being physically active for older home care clients
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16153