Long-term care residents’ acceptance of a standing intervention: A qualitative intrinsic case study

•It is possible to ask residents of long-term care residences to stand as an intervention.•Standing is increased for long-term care residents because of acceptability.•The Theoretical Framework Acceptability fits with a standing intervention in Long-Term care Results.•Standing is a simple interventi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geriatric nursing (New York) 2023-03, Vol.50, p.94-101
Hauptverfasser: McCain, Jamie E., Caissie, Linda, Edwards, Jonathon, Handrigan, Grant, McGibbon, Chris, Hebert, Jeffrey, Gallibois, Molly, Cooling, Kendra M., Read, Emily, Sénéchal, Martin, Bouchard, Danielle R.
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container_end_page 101
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container_start_page 94
container_title Geriatric nursing (New York)
container_volume 50
creator McCain, Jamie E.
Caissie, Linda
Edwards, Jonathon
Handrigan, Grant
McGibbon, Chris
Hebert, Jeffrey
Gallibois, Molly
Cooling, Kendra M.
Read, Emily
Sénéchal, Martin
Bouchard, Danielle R.
description •It is possible to ask residents of long-term care residences to stand as an intervention.•Standing is increased for long-term care residents because of acceptability.•The Theoretical Framework Acceptability fits with a standing intervention in Long-Term care Results.•Standing is a simple intervention to decrease sedentary time and seems to be accepted among long-term care residents when the burden is not perceived as too high. Older adults in long-term care are sedentary. Standing is recommended to reduce sedentary time, but there is limited research on long-term care residents’ acceptability of standing interventions. The acceptability of the Stand If You Can (SIYC) randomized clinical trial among long-term care residents was explored using a single intrinsic qualitative case study design. The five month intervention consisted of supervised 100 min standing sessions per week. Participants completed post-intervention interviews, which were analyzed using the Thematic Framework Analysis through the lens of an acceptability framework. The 10 participants (7 female), age 73 to 102 years, stood a median of 53% of the intervention offered time (range 20%–94%). The participants reported acceptability in many aspects of the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability. Standing is a simple intervention to decrease sedentary time and seems to be accepted among long-term care residents when burden is not perceived as too high.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.gerinurse.2023.01.024
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subjects Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Female
Humans
Inactivity
Long-Term Care
Nursing Home
Qualitative Research
Quality of Life
Sedentary Behavior
Sedentary behavior intervention
Standing Position
title Long-term care residents’ acceptance of a standing intervention: A qualitative intrinsic case study
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