| Literature DB >> 34040848 |
Cecilie Thøgersen-Ntoumani1, Eleanor Quested1, Stuart J H Biddle2, Marlene Kritz1, Jenny Olson1,2, Elissa Burton3, Ester Cerin4,5, Keith D Hill3, Joanne McVeigh6,7, Nikos Ntoumanis1.
Abstract
Objective: The Residents in Action Trial (RiAT; ACTRN12616001177448) was a 16-week motivationally-embellished peer-led walking intervention designed to increase walking, reduce sitting, and improve mental health and well-being in insufficiently active residents in retirement villages. In this paper we report on 1) trial feasibility and acceptability, and 2) evaluate the processes involved in the implementation of the intervention using the RE-AIM framework. Method: A mixed methods design was employed, consisting of data from accelerometers, surveys, (individual, pair-based and focus group) interviews, and participant logbooks. Participants included 116 walkers (M(SD) age = 78.37(8.30); 92% female), 8 peer leaders (i.e. ambassadors) and 3 retirement village managers from 14 retirement villages. Descriptives and linear mixed modelling were used to analyse the quantitative data and inductive thematic analyses were employed to analyse the interview data.Entities:
Keywords: Peer leaders; motivation training; older adults; retirement villages; walking intervention
Year: 2019 PMID: 34040848 PMCID: PMC8114369 DOI: 10.1080/21642850.2019.1629934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Psychol Behav Med ISSN: 2164-2850
Definitions, data sources and operationalisation of RE-AIM dimensions.
| Definition | Data sources | Operationalisation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reach | Proportion and representativeness of eligible participants from partaking in the intervention | Data from age care providers, retirement village managers, interviews | N of walkers consenting to participate relative to those expressing initial interest N of consenting participants in relation to total N of residents per village who live in independent living units (information provided by village managers) N of walkers insufficiently physically active in relation to estimated eligible proportion Recruitment strategies used |
| Efficacy | The extent to which the intervention achieved its goals | activPAL monitor, questionnaire surveys, interviews | Attrition and drop-out (walkers) N and nature of adverse events Pre to post-intervention changes in PA and sitting (activPALs) Pre to post-intervention changes in general health and functioning, quality of life, anxiety and depression, loneliness and subjective vitality Qualitative data on effectiveness (post-intervention interviews with walkers and ambassadors) |
| Adoption | Proportion of aged care providers, villages and ambassadors taking part | Logs completed by researchers, questionnaire surveys, interviews | N of age care providers that agreed to participate in the trial N of villages per aged care provider agreeing to participate N of ambassadors expressing interest N of ambassadors consenting to participate N of ambassadors retained vs dropped out N of ambassadors completing training (face to face vs DVD) Satisfaction with ambassador training Extent to which ambassadors liked, felt confident and felt effective |
| Implementation | The extent to which the intervention was implemented as intended | Logs completed by researchers and walkers, surveys, interviews | N of walkers completing training (face to face vs DVD) Walkers’ ratings of acceptability of training Walkers’ ratings of acceptability of the whole intervention N of intervention tools used by walkers |
| Maintenance | The extent to which aspects of the intervention is maintained following the end of the intervention | Interviews | Extent to which group walks continued post-intervention Qualitative data on whether participants have kept up walking post intervention, from managers, ambassadors and walkers |
Ambassador motivational strategies and evidence of their efficacy, implementation, and maintenance in the ambassadors plus motivation training condition.
| Strategies peer leaders focused on in group walks | Efficacy | Implementation | Maintenance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Get to know the walkers and help them feel at ease (relatedness support) | ‘ | ‘ | |
| Help each walker feel like an important member of the group (relatedness support) | Social support | ||
| Help make walking more enjoyable (autonomous motivation) | Walking with others | ||
| Help walkers feel successful (competence support) | |||
| Provide choice to walkers regarding their walking (autonomy support) | ‘ | ||
| Encourage input from walkers (autonomy support) | |||
| Explore what your walkers find useful in terms of reducing their sitting (autonomy support) | |||
| Explore what your walkers find useful in terms of keeping up their walking | Self-monitoring of behaviour – pedometer | Self-determined motivation | |
| Explore what will help your walkers to continue their walking pattern after week 10 (autonomous motivation) | Self-monitoring (general) | ||
| Celebrate success, discuss which changes your walkers have noticed as a result of the programme, and setting new goals (competence support) | Walking programme as a catalyst for new PA behaviours |
Figure 1.Logic model. *Note. Treatment group allocation: Ambassadors plus motivation training (AMB + MT) or Ambassadors without motivation training (AMB).
Demographic characteristics of walkers in RiAT.
| Variable | |
|---|---|
| Age years; mean (SD) | 78.37 (8.30) |
| Female, n (%) | 92 (79.30) |
| Years living in retirement village; mean (SD) | 6.67 (5.15) |
| Marital status; married, n (%) | 51 (44) |
| Marital status; never married, n (%) | 9 (7.8) |
| Marital status; widowed, n (%) | 35 (30.20) |
| Marital status; separated or divorced, n (%) | 16 (13.80) |
| Marital status; other, n (%) | 1 (0.9%) |
| Number of chronic health conditions; mean (SD) | .97 (.94) |
| Type of tenancy; rental/subsidised, n (%) | 12 (10.30) |
| Type of tenancy; subsidised, n (%) | 11 (9.50) |
| Type of tenancy; lease for life, n (%) | 66 (56.90) |
| Type of tenancy; resident funded and lease for life, n (%) | 25 (21.60) |
| Happiness living in village (1 = very unhappy; 5 = very happy); mean (SD) | 3.95 (1.34) |
Internal reliability coefficients and descriptives for walkers for each assessment timepoint.
| Variable | Baseline | Post | 6-month follow-up | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Waking wear time (hrs/day) | – | 15.07 (1.51) | – | 14.74 (1.41) | – | 14.18 (1.23) |
| Step counts | – | 6170 (2461) | – | 6920 (2255) | – | 6456 (1451) |
| Stepping time (mins/day) | – | 80 (29) | – | 88 (24) | – | 91 (21) |
| LIPA (mins/day) | – | 273 (100) | – | 294 (65) | – | 266 (62) |
| MVPA (mins/day) | – | 48 (20) | – | 56 (19) | – | 54 (12) |
| Standing (mins/day) | – | 244 (92) | – | 264 (58) | – | 248 (55) |
| Sitting (mins/day) | – | 566 (119) | – | 534 (88) | – | 565 (127) |
| PCS | – | 42.22 (9.93) | . | 42.11 (12.21) | – | 40.87 (12.07) |
| MCS | – | 51.35 (8.42) | – | 51.51 (9.69) | – | 48.15 (9.70) |
| Physical fitness | – | 3.10 (1.14) | – | 2.96 (.91) | – | 2.68 (.96) |
| Emotional functioning | – | 4.05 (.81) | – | 4.16 (.92) | – | 4.09 (.96) |
| Daily activities | – | 4.28 (.81) | – | 4.18 (.83) | – | 4.34 (.75) |
| Social role functioning | – | 4.40 (.69) | – | 4.51 (.76) | – | 4.61 (.87) |
| Perceived pain | – | 3.81 (.99) | – | 3.90 (1.03) | – | 3.52 (1.15) |
| Change in health | – | 3.68 (.89) | – | 3.55 (.76) | – | 3.27 (.59) |
| Overall health | – | 3.79 (.82) | – | 3.68 (.83) | – | 3.57 (.95) |
| Social support | – | 4.04 (1.04) | – | 4.05 (1.02) | – | 4.21 (1.12) |
| Quality of life | – | 4.08 (.67) | – | 4.04 (.65) | – | 4.12 (.59) |
| Anxiety | .82 | 1.85 (.55) | .81 | 1.90 (.55) | .81 | 1.57 (.45) |
| Depression | .77 | 1.66 (.50) | .77 | 1.66 (.50) | .44 | 1.44 (.27) |
| Loneliness | .89 | 2.36 (.52) | .84 | 2.40 (.50) | .88 | 2.29 (.50) |
| Subjective vitality | .81 | 4.61 (1.18) | .81 | 4.42 (1.00) | .89 | 4.83 (1.17) |
Figure 2.Flow of participant responses per condition.
Results of linear mixed modelling for physical activity and sitting behaviour in the ambassador plus motivation training condition, adjusting for village clustering.
| Variable | Baseline | Post | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Steps (per day) | 7088 (649) | 8077 (461) | .05 |
| Stepping time (mins/day) | 94 (8) | 106 (5) | .04 |
| LIPA (mins/day) | 317 (28) | 329 (14) | .41 |
| MVPA (mins/day) | 56 (6) | 65 (4) | .07 |
| Sitting (mins/day) | 540 (29) | 537 (23) | .89 |
| Standing (mins/day) | 280 (25) | 292 (13) | .36 |
Note. LIPA = Light intensity physical activity; MVPA = Moderate to vigorous intensity physical activity.
Results of linear mixed modelling mental health and well-being outcomes from pre to post-intervention across all conditions, adjusting for village clustering (using effect coding).
| Variable | Baseline | Post | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whole sample | 42.37 (1.32) | 42.21 (.72) | .83 |
| AMB + MT | 40.14 (3.61) | 38.49 (1.98) | .41 |
| MT | 39.95 (4.18) | 35.42 (2.29) | .05 |
| AMB | 35.43 (4.24) | 34.04 | .55 |
| Whole sample | 51.64 (1.09) | 51.81 (.80) | .84 |
| AMB + MT | 50.16 (2.99) | 50.36 (2.20) | .62 |
| MT | 54.01 (3.47) | 54.53 (2.55) | .84 |
| AMB | 50.08 (3.52) | 49.85 (2.58) | .93 |
| Whole sample | 3.00 (.10) | 2.92 (.10) | .46 |
| AMB + MT | 3.57 (.28) | 3.28 (.27) | .28 |
| MT | 3.17 (.31) | 3.31 (.31) | .65 |
| AMB | 2.43 (.32) | 2.67 (.32) | .45 |
| Whole sample | 4.03 (.08) | 4.11 (.08) | .35 |
| AMB + MT | 4.14 (.22) | 4.21 (.21) | .75 |
| MT | 4.32 (.25) | 4.41 (.24) | .71 |
| AMB | 3.74 (.26) | 4.07 (.25) | .19 |
| Whole sample | 4.29 (.08) | 4.17 (.08) | .15 |
| AMB + MT | 3.91 (.22) | 3.99 (.22) | .72 |
| MT | 3.92 (.25) | 3.94 (.25) | .94 |
| AMB | 3.72 (.26) | 3.71 (.26) | .98 |
| Whole sample | 4.41 (.07) | 4.50 (.08) | .29 |
| AMB + MT | 4.12 (.19) | 4.21 (.21) | .67 |
| MT | 3.99 (.22) | 4.34 (.24) | .15 |
| AMB | 4.08 (.22) | 4.37 (.25) | .25 |
| Whole sample | 3.79 (.10) | 3.90 (.09) | .25 |
| AMB + MT | 3.65 (.26) | 3.52 (.24) | .60 |
| MT | 3.45 (.30) | 3.05 (.27) | .14 |
| AMB | 3.22 (.31) | 3.22 (.28) | .99 |
| Whole sample | 3.68 (.09) | 3.56 (.08) | .17 |
| AMB + MT | 3.67 (.23) | 3.48 (.22) | .40 |
| MT | 3.85 (.26) | 3.43 (.25) | .10 |
| AMB | 3.58 (.27) | 3.53 (.26) | .86 |
| Whole sample | 3.79 (.08) | 3.70 (.09) | .30 |
| AMB + MT | 3.72 (.21) | 3.81 (.24) | .72 |
| MT | 3.97 (.24) | 3.55 (.27) | .13 |
| AMB | 3.41 (.25) | 3.36 (.28) | .87 |
| Whole sample | 4.00 (.10) | 4.01 (.11) | .94 |
| AMB + MT | 4.23 (.27) | 4.15 (.30) | .79 |
| MT | 4.10 (.31) | 3.92 (.34) | .59 |
| AMB | 4.10 (.32) | 4.00 (.35) | .78 |
| Whole sample | 4.04 (.06) | 3.99 (.07) | .50 |
| AMB + MT | 4.33 (.17) | 4.27 (.17) | .73 |
| MT | 4.39 (.19) | 4.27 (.20) | .55 |
| AMB | 3.94 (.20) | 4.13 (.20) | .35 |
| Whole sample | 1.87 (.06) | 1.83 (.05) | .41 |
| AMB + MT | 1.75 (.15) | 1.70 (.14) | .74 |
| MT | 1.90 (.17) | 1.83 (.16) | .66 |
| AMB | 1.86 (.17) | 1.72 (.17) | .39 |
| Whole sample | 1.69 (.05) | 1.71 (.05) | .73 |
| AMB + MT | 1.67 (.14) | 1.69 (.13) | .86 |
| MT | 1.92 (.15) | 1.75 (.15) | .26 |
| AMB | 1.90 (.16) | 1.71 (.16) | .22 |
| Whole sample | 2.30 (.06) | 2.32 (.05) | .64 |
| AMB + MT | 2.51 (.17) | 2.43 (.14) | .59 |
| MT | 2.38 (.20) | 2.22 (.16) | .34 |
| AMB | 2.22 (.20) | 2.29 (.16) | .66 |
| Whole sample | 4.62 (.11) | 4.47 (.12) | .21 |
| AMB + MT | 4.20 (.29) | 4.43 (.32) | .46 |
| MT | 4.63 (.33) | 4.46 (.36) | .63 |
| AMB | 3.77 (.34) | 4.46 (.37) | .07 |
Note: AMB + MT = Ambassadors plus motivation training; MT = Motivation training without ambassadors AMB = Ambassadors without motivation training. The no ambassadors nor motivation training (AMB or MT) condition was the reference group.