| Literature DB >> 29534699 |
Laura Coll-Planas1,2, Sergi Blancafort3,4, Xavier Rojano3,4, Marta Roqué3,4, Rosa Monteserín4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Older people living in socio-economic deprived urban areas especially suffer the effects of health inequalities but have been insufficiently targeted. Strategies promoted by local primary health care agents might influence health and social behaviours as intermediate social determinants that are modifiable and thus can potentially mitigate health inequalities. Therefore, we aim to develop and assess the effectiveness of a complex intervention based on a community programme that promotes self-management, health literacy and social capital targeting older people from urban socioeconomically disadvantaged areas in order to improve their self-perceived health as an indicator of health inequality reduction. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Primary care; Public health; Social medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29534699 PMCID: PMC5851078 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5219-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Trial Consort flow diagram
Sessions, contents, materials and procedures of “Sentir-nos Bé” community programme
| Session number | Contents | Materials and procedures |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Health and self-care | The instructor presents the programme to the participants and they introduce themselves to the group. Using photos of daily activities related to self-care, participants share judgements, views and ideas about self-care. Participants are invited to bring a personal object from home in the next session to introduce themselves. At the end of each session, participants create cooperatively a board with paintings, handcrafts, small writings and thoughts, etc. |
| 2 | Physical activity | Participants explain briefly to the group the personal object brought from home. Participants set and share a specific goal related with their daily life to be fulfilled during the week. Using local maps, participants identify and share physical activity assets, discuss about benefits and limitations of doing physical activity and agree on a group walk in the neighbourhood for the next session. |
| 3 | First local trip | The group does a round walk starting and ending at the primary care centre visiting interesting places where to do physical activity, e.g., parks or outdoor gyms. |
| 4 | Emotional health | Participants share the fulfilment of their personal goal. If they do not succeed, the instructor carries out a problem solving technique (each session until the end of the programme, excepting the local trips). The group discusses and shares strategies to cope with emotions and feelings. A relaxation technique practice is carried out. |
| 5 | Healthy eating habits | Participants share their nutritional habits and tips to eat cheaper and healthier. The group shares and discusses about the places in the neighbourhood where they normally buy. Participants agree upon the market or the supermarket to visit in the next session. |
| 6 | Second local trip | The group visits a local market or supermarket. During the visit, participants share and discuss about their habits and preferences when buying. The instructor and the observers give advice about nutritional facts and reading labels. |
| 7 | Loneliness and social relationships | Using a variety of photos, participants share their thoughts and perceptions about loneliness and social relationships. The group splits into subgroups that are asked to create a story based on key words related with social relationships. |
| 8 | Participation in the community | A participant reads out loud the story of “La Lita”, an old woman engaged in the community of a low socio-economic neighbourhood. Using local maps, participants identify and share community assets, discuss about benefits and limitations of social participation and agree upon a group visit to a local community asset for the next session. |
| 9 | Third local trip | The group visits a community asset. A volunteer from the centre explains to the group the activities carried out. Participants are invited to engage in social activities. |
| 10 | Personal autonomy | The group shares their thoughts and beliefs about personal autonomy discussing practical cases presented by the instructor. |
| 11 | Communication with health professionals | The group watches four short videos that explain how to prepare the medical encounter. Participants share and discuss their thoughts and feelings when visiting a health professional, as well as their personal knowledge about health and social resources. |
| 12 | Group discussion | The group shares and discusses their thoughts and feelings about the programme. Participants are invited to make an imaginary gift to someone else from the group. The group shares a farewell meal. |
Fig. 2Conceptual framework of the intervention
Overview of outcomes, outcome measures, instruments and assessments time points
| Outcomes | Outcome (measures) | Instrument | Assessment time points |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal information | Age, gender, living arrangement, civil status, place of birth, educational background, job, medical conditions | Primary care records | T0 |
| Changes in living arrangement and civil status | T1, T2 | ||
| Primary outcomes | Health status | SF-12 | T0, T1, T2 |
| Secondary outcomes | Quality of life | SF-12 | T0, T1, T2 |
| Social capital | European Values Survey | T0, T1, T2 | |
| Social support | Inventory of social resources in the elderly | T0, T1, T2 | |
| Social participation | Loneliness Este II Scale-Subjective Social Participation Index | T0, T1, T2 | |
| Care and self-care | Self-care semFYC survey | T0, T1, T2 | |
| Emotional well-being | Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS) | T0, T1, T2 | |
| Loneliness | Gierveld and De Jong scale | T0, T1, T2 | |
| Depression | Geriatric depression scale (GDS-5) | T0, T1, T2 | |
| Physical activity | The International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) | T0, T1, T2 | |
| Health literacy | Health literacy scale (HLS-EU-16) | T0, T1, T2 | |
| Medication consumption | Primary care records | T0, T1, T2 |
Schedule of enrolment, interventions, and assessments