| Literature DB >> 36188821 |
Taiki Yoshida1,2,3, Yohei Otaka1,4, Rieko Osu5, Masashi Kumagai1, Shin Kitamura1,3, Jun Yaeda6.
Abstract
Background: Motivation is essential for patients with subacute stroke undergoing intensive rehabilitation. Although it is known that motivation induces behavioral changes toward rehabilitation, detailed description has been lacking. Motivation can be intrinsic or extrinsic; however, it is unclear which type of factors mainly motivates patients' daily rehabilitation. Purpose: This study aimed to examine the factors influencing patients' motivation and to explore the behavioral changes induced by motivation, especially age-related differences. Method: Twenty participants (mean age 65.8 years [standard deviation 13.7]) who had a subacute stroke and underwent rehabilitation at a convalescent hospital were recruited using convenience sampling. Semi-structured interviews were conducted by an occupational therapist with an interview topic guide regarding factors influencing motivation and how it affects behavioral change. Interviews were recorded, transcribed to text, and analyzed by three occupational therapists using thematic analysis. The participants were divided into two groups: aged patients (aged ≥ 65 years) and middle-aged patients (aged < 65 years), and data were analyzed according to the groups. This study was conducted according to the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research.Entities:
Keywords: age; motivation; qualitative study; rehabilitation; stroke
Year: 2021 PMID: 36188821 PMCID: PMC9397769 DOI: 10.3389/fresc.2021.664758
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Rehabil Sci ISSN: 2673-6861
Sample characteristics.
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| Gender, male/female, | 7/3 | 6/4 | 0.639 |
| Age, mean (standard deviation) | 53.5 (6.8) | 78.0 (4.0) | <0.001 |
| Side of paresis (right/left/bilateral), | 5/5/0 | 4/5/1 | 0.574 |
| Days from stroke onset to interview, mean (standard deviation) | 84.7 (36.3) | 74.5 (25.0) | 0.597 |
| Days from admission to interview, mean (standard deviation) | 53.3 (31.0) | 46.7 (24.4) | 0.705 |
| Total hospitalization days, mean (standard deviation) | 86.9 (46.5) | 86.9 (46.5) | 0.472 |
| Number of family members living together, median (interquartile range) | 1 (0–2) | 1 (1–1) | 0.386 |
| Functional Independence Measure total score, median (interquartile range) | 117 (111–123) | 109 (96–115) | 0.088 |
| Functional Independence Measure motor score, median (interquartile range) | 83 (82–88) | 80 (70–82) | 0.103 |
| Mini-Mental State Examination, median (interquartile range) | 29 (29,30) | 28 (28,29) | 0.137 |
| Living place before onset, home/not at home | 10/0 | 10/0 | |
| Working status before stroke, yes/no | 9/1 | 3/7 | 0.006 |
Significant difference between group aged < 65 years and aged ≥ 65 years.
Interview topic guide.
| 1. | When does your motivation for rehabilitation become high (low)? |
| 2. | What keeps your motivation high? |
| 3. | What makes your motivation low? |
| 4. | When your motivation becomes high (low), how does your behavior change? |
| 5. | What is your motivation for rehabilitation? |
Categories of personal factors derived from the thematic analysis.
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| Patients' goals | Individual goals of activities and functions | Achievement goals pertaining to activities | “My goal is to recover my physical condition as soon as possible to get back to the same daily routine as before. Because of this, I can expend efforts on daily rehabilitation” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 2). |
| Goals for improvement of function and activity | “I want to be able to control my body freely again. Toward this end, I work hard to continue my rehabilitation” (aged < 65 years, Male 5). | ||
| Role as a family member | Role as a housewife | “I hope that I will return home and regain my role as a housewife after discharge. When thinking about this goal, I understand what is necessary for me to do now” (aged < 65 years, Female 2). | |
| Role as a supporting family member | “Preparing meals has been my role. So, I am thinking now that I want to continue this role after discharged home” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 1). | ||
| Hope to acquire independence to reduce the burden on one's family | “If my walk is still unstable when I get discharged from hospital to home, it may be burdensome for my family. I don't want to bother my family” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 7). | ||
| Social participation | Hope to return to work | “My goal is returning to work. When I am thinking about that goal, I feel motivated and think that I should put much effort into my rehabilitation” (aged < 65 years, Male 7). “My goal is to return to my previous work. That is my motivation for rehabilitation” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 5). | |
| Hobby | “I really like to play golf. I have to do training [to] play that” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 3). | ||
| Interaction with friends | “I love to drink with friends. So, I have to be able to pick up a beer mug with my hand. To go to drink with friends again, I know that I should do rehabilitation” (aged < 65 years, Male 1). | ||
| Discharge to home | “I want to go home and get back to my previous life as soon as possible. So, I should do what I have to do” (aged < 65 years, Male 6). | ||
| Discrepancy between expected goal and reality | “I had expected that I would have been able to walk without a cane by this time and would be preparing for the discharge by now. But the reality is not what I had expected; I am still using a wheelchair. The discrepancy between the hospitalization length I expected and reality makes me lose motivation” (aged < 65 years, Male 3). | ||
| Experiences of success and failure | Success experiences | Recovery from impairments and disability | “Motivation will be very high when I am able to do that [which] I couldn't do 1 week ago” (aged < 65 years, Male 3). |
| Expansion of permitted range of activities in the hospital | “I want to expand my activity space. Then, I could go to a shop in the hospital, for example” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 7). | ||
| Failure experiences | Discrepancy between expectations and real performance of the tasks | “Sometimes I became disappointed that I couldn't do an easy task that I could do before” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 3). | |
| Stagnation of the recovery | “I was depressed when my movement was worse than it was yesterday” (aged < 65 years, Female 4). | ||
| Repetitions of failure experiences | “When I fail something repeatedly, [my] motivation [decreases]” (aged < 65 years, Male 6). | ||
| Physical condition and cognitive function | Physical condition | Fatigue | “I make an effort to do more when I have more physical strength; but I want to lie down when I am tired” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 1). |
| Physical weakness | “I lose weight when I can't eat my meals. Then, my physical strength decreases. In such cases, I don't feel like participating in rehabilitation” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 1). | ||
| Pain | “Motivation decreases when I can't do any daily rehabilitation training due to pain” (aged < 65 years, Male 3). “I'm worried that hard training may cause bad physical conditions such as muscle pain” (aged < 65 years, Male 1). | ||
| Worsening of numbness | “Some changes such as pain or numbness in my body reduced my motivation” (aged < 65 years, Male 9). | ||
| Cognitive function | “I am here to do rehabilitation. We need to recognize why we are in this hospital. If I cannot understand the purpose of my training because of dementia, I cannot keep [my] motivation high” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 10). | ||
| Resilience | “I recognize my disability. I need to live with this disability” (aged < 65 years, Male 8). “When a doctor said to me that I could have sequelae, I realized that I must make a tremendous effort for my own rehabilitation. I will be in trouble if I can't walk” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 9). |
Only for participants aged < 65 years;
Only for participants aged ≥ 65 years.
Categories of social relationship factors derived from the thematic analysis.
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| Influence of rehabilitation professionals | Relationships with therapists | Feedback from therapists | “In my opinion, whether or not there is a certain improvement for me is very vague. When the therapists give me positive feedback from their professional viewpoints, it makes me realize that I have improved somehow” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 4). |
| Reliance on therapists | “I trust therapists and medical staffs with my rehabilitation. These good relationships could increase my motivation” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 7). | ||
| Therapists' attitude toward patients | “My motivation for rehabilitation decreased when my therapists repeatedly pointed out my mistakes, which made me feel that I could not do anything” (aged < 65 years, Male 6). “When I wanted to engage in self-exercise for my weak points, the therapist kindly devised a regimen for me. Since then, I trusted the therapist more, and my motivation for rehabilitation has increased significantly” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 3). | ||
| Not influenced by phrases of praise | “Sometimes, I would doubt the therapists' positive feedbacks. I was pleased to hear some of those praises; but I could not detect any truth in them” (aged < 65 years, Male 1). | ||
| To do training for the sake of therapists | “My therapist has made such a great effort for me. I wanted therapists to feel that I was worth teaching. I think I need to rehearse what I have learned and engage in self-training” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 2). | ||
| Relationship with nurses | Feedback from nurses | “I think it is very important for me to receive positive comments from nurses such as ‘you have been improving and I know you are working hard on your rehabilitation’” (aged < 65 years, Female 10). | |
| Reliance on nurses | “I was very pleased when some nurses mentioned my improvement. That made me feel like they recognized my efforts” (aged < 65 years, female 10). “Some nurses are restless and that makes me hate them sometimes. I feel I am losing my motivation for rehabilitation when I am with them” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 6). | ||
| Relationship with medical doctors | “When a medical doctor in the acute hospital said that some impairments might remain after discharge, I was disappointed. But when another doctor in the same hospital said that they will make me improve within 2 months, that made me so motivated” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 9). | ||
| Exercise methods | Varied contents | “Exercises provided by my therapist are very good, of course, while other therapists would make me aware that other ideas for rehabilitation are also good” (aged < 65 years, Male 8). | |
| Shared goal setting and understanding of the purpose of the exercise | “I realized that becoming aware of the aim of the exercise is very important for increasing my motivation” (aged < 65 years, Male 9). “If goals are shared with therapists, motivation can be maintained even during hard training.” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 8). | ||
| Appropriateness of the exercise contents | “I feel frustrated if I am given the next level of exercise when I am yet to perfect the current level. I would be more motivated when the therapist clarifies my rehabilitation goals step-by-step and changes the exercise method accordingly” (aged < 65 years, Female 2). “In daily rehabilitation, therapists provide feedback on my weak points, which I also recognize, and teach me specific exercise methods to improve, which makes me motivated continuously” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 5). | ||
| Relationship between patients | Observation of other patients | Observation of other patients' efforts | “Just by watching others making a big effort motivates me. The important thing is that he is making his best effort by his own way, which has nothing to do with the severity of the disability” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 3). |
| Observation of aged patients' efforts | “When I see the effort of the aged patient, I feel that I should be making more effort on my own rehabilitation” (aged < 65 years, Male 9). | ||
| Comparison with other patients' impairments and disabilities | “Sometimes I compare my abilities or differences to other patients. If other patients can do some movement, I want to be able to do those” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 10). | ||
| No influences from other patients | “All I can do is do my best. Other patients have no relationship to me” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 9). | ||
| Communication with other patients | Interaction with other patients | “An interaction with other patients is very important for me. It makes me feel like having a mutual encouragement” (aged < 65 years, Female 2). | |
| Conflicts with patients | “My motivation decreases when I have trouble in relationships with other patients” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 4). | ||
| Patients' supporters | Existence of supporters | Family | “My family work so hard for me, so I must not complain about anything. I want to give back to them” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 1). |
| Coworkers | “Some of my coworkers say they will wait for me to return to work. This is such a great motivation” (aged < 65 years, Male 9). | ||
| Friends | “When my friends visit me, I really appreciate that. If no one comes, I will be depressed” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 10). | ||
| Relationship with supporters | Conversation with family | “My family member said to me that they were happy to see my abilities recovered, which makes me happy” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 9). | |
| Encouragement | “Keeping a high motivation is very tough. An encouragement from my friend helps me to maintain high motivation” (aged < 65 years, Female 10). | ||
| Family visit | “When my family visits me, I get the feeling that I want to be discharged from here as soon as I improve significantly enough” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 2). |
Only for participants aged < 65 years;
Only for participants aged ≥ 65 years.
Categories of effects on patients' behavior derived from the thematic analysis.
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| Patients' behavior changes | Self-training | Extent of self-training | “When my motivation is high, I will walk through a corridor for self-training” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 7). |
| Cancelation of self-training for rehabilitation with therapists | “I never did self-training. If I did, I would be too tired to do rehabilitation with therapists” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 1). | ||
| Attitude | Attitude toward rehabilitation | “When my motivation is high, I demand my therapists to let me do harder training” (aged < 65 years, Male 6). | |
| Total time spent in a room | “I want to go shopping at the hospital store. When I have high motivation, I will not stay in my room” (aged < 65 years, Female 10). | ||
| Attitude toward daily activities | “When my condition is good, I want to do what I can do in daily activities” (aged ≥ 65 years, Male 7). | ||
| Expressions | Facial expression | “I could smile when my motivation was high” (aged < 65 years, Female 2). | |
| Quality of expression | “When my motivation was high, I behaved cheerfully” (aged < 65 years, Female 2). | ||
| Talking with other patients | “I talked to others a lot when my motivation was high” (aged < 65 years, Female 10). | ||
| No particular changes | “Motivation does not affect my activities. I just do what the therapist teaches me” (aged ≥ 65 years, Female 4). |
Only for participants aged < 65 years;
Only for participants aged ≥ 65 years.