AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored falls service practitioners' perspectives on helping patients manage falls prevention and the transition to community exercise programs.
  • Semi-structured interviews with eight practitioners revealed challenges in promoting patient self-management due to time constraints, practitioner buy-in, and program availability.
  • A more integrated, person-centered approach is needed for falls prevention to become a long-term focus, rather than just short-term solutions, to improve patient outcomes.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to understand the views of falls service practitioners regarding: their role in supporting self-management of falls prevention; and a transition pathway from National Health Service (NHS) exercise-based falls interventions to community-run exercise programmes.

Method: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with physiotherapists, nurses, and rehabilitation assistants ( = 8) who worked in an NHS falls service. Data were analysed using thematic analysis.

Results: Certain aspects of supporting patients in self-management were deemed to be within or beyond the scope of falls service practitioners. Challenges in supporting transition to community-run programmes included: practitioner awareness and buy in; patient buy in; and patient suitability/programme availability.

Conclusion: Practitioners sought to be patient-centred as a means to engage patients in self-management of falls prevention exercises. Time-limited intervention periods and waiting list pressures were barriers to the promotion of long-term self-management approaches. A disconnect between falls service interventions and community-run programmes hindered willing practitioners from supporting patients in transitioning. Unless falls risk and prevention is seen by healthcare providers as a long-term condition which requires person-centred support from practitioners to develop self-management approaches, then falls services may only be able to offer short-term measures which are potentially not long lasting.IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATIONFalls rehabilitation practitioners need to take a person-centred approach to engage patients in self-management of falls prevention exercises.Providing information and signposting to exercise opportunities such as community-run programmes following falls service interventions should be viewed as being within the scope of the role of falls service practitioners.Rehabilitation practitioners should consider viewing falls risk as a long-term condition, to promote longer-term behavioural change approaches to ongoing engagement of exercise for falls prevention.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09638288.2020.1849423DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

falls service
28
falls prevention
16
falls
15
self-management falls
12
patients self-management
12
community-run programmes
12
service
8
service practitioners
8
interventions community-run
8
supporting patients
8

Similar Publications

Background: Tuberculosis (TB) remains a significant health concern in India, especially among households with children and young adolescents aged 6-17 years. Despite ongoing research, there is a knowledge gap regarding specific risk factors for TB within this demographic. This study aims to bridge this gap by examining the association between TB and various socio-demographic factors, including socioeconomic status, nutritional status, and environmental conditions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: Neuraminidase (NA)-specific antibodies contribute to immunity against influenza. While studies have demonstrated increased NA inhibiting (NAI) antibody titers after vaccination with egg-derived inactivated influenza vaccines (eIIV), the response to cell culture-derived (c) IIV has not been reported.

Methods: An immunogenicity sub-study was performed within a clinical trial comparing the effectiveness of egg, cell, and recombinant hemagglutinin (HA)-derived influenza vaccines during the 2018-2019 and 2019-2020 influenza seasons.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nowadays, consent to use donor bodies for medical education and research is obtained from the body donors and their families before the donation. Recently, the International Federation of Associations of Anatomists (IFAA) published guidelines that could restrict the appearance of cadaveric images in commercial anatomical resources such as textbooks and other educational products. These guidelines state that the donor must expressly consent to using such images for this purpose.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction And Hypothesis: The objective of our study is to investigate the presence of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) and its correlation with the risk of falling in older women with cognitive frailty.

Methods: The descriptive study was conducted on 102 female older adults, 60 women were classed as cognitively frail and 42 as healthy. Women were classified as having mild cognitive impairment based on the Clinical Dementia Rating Scale and as frail based on the Clinical Frailty Scale.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aim: To synthesise literature on the aging characteristics of people with long-term physical disabilities and inform future nursing research, education, practice and health policy.

Design: Scoping review.

Data Source: Literature searches were performed in the CINAHL, PubMed, and PsycINFO databases in April 2024.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!