| Literature DB >> 32121040 |
Claudio Di Lorito1, Alessandro Bosco2, Kristian Pollock3, Rowan H Harwood3, Roshan das Nair2, Pip Logan1, Sarah Goldberg3, Vicky Booth1, Kavita Vedhara4, Maureen Godfrey1, Marianne Dunlop1, Veronika van der Wardt5.
Abstract
Physical activity is beneficial for people with dementia. We previously developed a theoretical model to explain behaviour change in physical activity in dementia (PHYT-in-dementia). This study aimed to externally validate the model. Validation occurred through the process evaluation of a programme promoting activity in people with dementia (PrAISED 2). Twenty participants with dementia and their carers were interviewed to investigate their experience of the programme. The data were analysed through content analysis. The original constructs of the model were used as initial codes and new codes were generated, if elicited from the data. The constructs were also ranked, based on their frequency in the interviews. All of the original model constructs were validated and two novel constructs created: 'personal history' and 'information/knowledge'. Certain constructs (e.g., support) were more frequently mentioned than others (e.g., personal beliefs). We suggested modifications and integrated them into a revised model. The PHYT-in-dementia recognised that dementia has an impact on motivation to initiate and maintain behaviour change over time. The model advocates that interventions adopt a more holistic approach than traditional behaviour change strategies. The suggested revisions require further validation to accurately predict behaviour change in physical activity in people with dementia.Entities:
Keywords: behaviour change; dementia; exercise; external validation; physical activity; theory
Year: 2020 PMID: 32121040 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17051544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390