| Literature DB >> 28424898 |
Roganie Govender1,2, Caroline E Wood3, Stuart A Taylor4, Christina H Smith5, Helen Barratt6, Benjamin Gardner7,8.
Abstract
Poor patient adherence to swallowing exercises is commonly reported in the dysphagia literature on patients treated for head and neck cancer. Establishing the effectiveness of exercise interventions for this population may be undermined by patient non-adherence. The purpose of this study was to explore the barriers and facilitators to exercise adherence from a patient perspective, and to determine the best strategies to reduce the barriers and enhance the facilitators. In-depth interviews were conducted on thirteen patients. We used a behaviour change framework and model [Theoretical domains framework and COM-B (Capability-opportunity-motivation-behaviour) model] to inform our interview schedule and structure our results, using a content analysis approach. The most frequent barrier identified was psychological capability. This was highlighted by patient reports of not clearly understanding reasons for the exercises, forgetting to do the exercises and not having a system to keep track. Other barriers included feeling overwhelmed by information at a difficult time (lack of automatic motivation) and pain and fatigue (lack of physical capability). Main facilitators included having social support from family and friends, the desire to prevent negative consequences such as long-term tube feeding (reflective motivation), having the skills to do the exercises (physical capability), having a routine or trigger and receiving feedback on the outcome of doing exercises (automatic motivation). Linking these findings back to the theoretical model allows for a more systematic selection of theory-based strategies that may enhance the design of future swallowing exercise interventions for patients with head and neck cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Behaviour change; Content analysis; Dysphagia; Qualitative interviews; Swallowing exercises; Theory-based interventions
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28424898 PMCID: PMC5515965 DOI: 10.1007/s00455-017-9799-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dysphagia ISSN: 0179-051X Impact factor: 3.438
Fig. 1The COM-B model and the 14 associated domains of the Theoretical Domains Framework. *Adapted from [23]
Summary characteristics of sample
| Characteristic | Sample ( |
|---|---|
| Age | |
| 60 years and over | 4 (63) |
| Under 60 years | 9 (50) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 9 |
| Female | 4 |
| Treatment | |
| Surgery and chemo-radiation therapy | 4 |
| Chemo-radiation therapy | 5 |
| Surgery and chemotherapy | 1 |
| Radiation therapy | 3 |
| Swallowing status at time of interview: | |
| Performance status scale (PSS) | |
| 50 and over (soft diet and better) | 9 |
| Under 50 (liquids, puree, NBM) | 4 |
| Time since treatment | |
| 3–6 months | 6 |
| 6–12 months | 3 |
| 12–18 months | 3 |
| Beyond 18 months | 1 |
| Gastrostomy tube during treatment | |
| Yes | 11 |
| No | 2 |
| Still in situ at time of interview | 6 |
| Marital status | |
| Married/co-habiting | 8 |
| Single/separated | 5 |
| Occupational category | |
| Graduate professional | 2 |
| Manager/director | 2 |
| Caring/leisure/service industry | 2 |
| Professional/technical | 1 |
| Skilled trade | 2 |
| Admin/secretarial | 1 |
| Retired/not employed | 3 |
Key barriers to swallowing exercises
| Key barriers | COM-B | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Inadequate knowledge of how treatment will affect | Psychological capability | The doctor scribbled down a few symptoms that I would suffer after the radiotherapy, one of which was sore throat and one of which was maybe problems with the swallowing, or something along these lines (P12) |
| Inadequate understanding of why exercises given pre-treatment | Psychological capability | I understand someone sitting there explaining to me that you will need to do these exercises to help you swallow, but I don’t think the emphasis was how important they were, for me. I don’t think I actually took that on board (P3) |
| Forgetting to do exercises, no system of keeping track | Psychological capability | It was a bit random; I would just do it when I remembered, some of the time (P1) |
| Overwhelmed by information at a difficult time (emotion) | Automatic motivation | Loads and loads of stuff was happening that was unfamiliar and a bit scary, and so, you know, I, sort of, felt a bit bombarded with stuff (P1) |
| Pain and fatigue | Physical capability | I tried to do some of the exercises some of the days. And some of the exercises I just couldn’t do because of the pain I was actually experiencing that particular day (P3) |
Key facilitators to swallowing exercises
| Key facilitators | COM-B | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Support from clinician and family | Social opportunity | So I think it was before and it was during, right up until I could eat again, I was constantly getting advice and help (P13) |
| Desire to prevent negative consequences from treatment | Reflective motivation | But I don’t know, I just knew I had to eat, you know. And my object was not to use that… what do you call it? The tube they stick in you. And I managed it. I didn’t really use the tube (P6) |
| Knowing how to do the exercises (skills) | Physical capability | The exercises themselves were pretty simple exercises using the tongue and biting, protruding the tongue between your lips and holding onto the tongue and trying to swallow, to do with breathing and holding your breath while you swallow. They were pretty simple tasks (P3) |
| Having a routine and/or having a trigger to do the exercises (behavioural regulation) | Psychological capability | My exercises at the beginning, I’d actually write them on the chart. But what I used to do is I’d put them on… I’ve got an iPhone (P3) |
| Receiving feedback on outcome (re-inforcement) | Automatic motivation | You are achieving something every time. And they tell you, yes, you are doing very good and they tell you it’s open so many centimetres today, and then they’d compare it from last week. They’d have it written down (P4) |