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Nurse-led physical activity interventions for people with dementia in nursing homes: A systematic review on intervention characteristics and implementation facilitators/barriers.

International journal of nursing studies
June 1, 2024
Julian Hirt et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleSystematic ReviewReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to synthesize evidence on nurse-led physical activity interventions, including walking, for people with dementia in nursing homes and identify facilitators and barriers to sustainable implementation.

Results Summary

Outdoor or walking activities showed an overall positive impact on physical outcomes for people with dementia, though effects were inconclusive for other types of interventions. Barriers and facilitators to implementation included staff shortages and time resources (barriers) and ease of implementation and adaptability (facilitators).

Population

People with dementia living in nursing homes.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (5)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
physical exercise
no change
physical outcomes
people with dementia in nursing homes
-
effects were inconclusive
#1
care-integrated physical activity
no change
physical outcomes
people with dementia in nursing homes
-
effects were inconclusive
#2
outdoor or walking activity
increase
physical outcomes
people with dementia in nursing homes
-
showing an overall positive impact
#3
technology-supported physical exercise
no change
physical outcomes
people with dementia in nursing homes
-
effects were inconclusive
#4
dancing
no change
physical outcomes
people with dementia in nursing homes
-
effects were inconclusive
#5
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Physical activities are important to maintain and promote physical functioning and activities of daily living in people with dementia. Nurses are in a key position to deliver physical activity interventions in nursing homes. However, synthesized strategies for sustainable implementation of physical activity interventions in nursing homes for people with dementia are lacking. OBJECTIVE: We aimed at synthesizing the evidence on nurse-led physical activity interventions and at identifying facilitators and barriers to sustainable implementation of physical activity interventions for people with dementia. DESIGN: Systematic review. REVIEW METHODS: We performed a comprehensive literature search combining database searches (MEDLINE, CINAHL, CENTRAL, Web of Science Core Collection; last search: September 27, 2023) and supplementary search methods (citation tracking, web searching, clinical guideline database searching). We considered studies on nurse-led physical activity interventions for people with dementia living in nursing homes for eligibility; published as journal articles and related material in English, French, German language, without restrictions on primary study design and publication year. Independently and in duplicate, we assessed the references' eligibility and the quality of the included studies. We used the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool to appraise quality of included studies. We piloted and double-checked data extractions, and summarized the results narratively and graphically (harvest plot). We prospectively registered our review (PROSPERO CRD42021271833). RESULTS: We identified 24 studies (of which eleven were randomized trials) assessing various interventions that we categorized into physical exercise (n = 8), care-integrated physical activity (n = 6), outdoor or walking activity (n = 5), technology-supported physical exercise (n = 3), and dancing (n = 2). Types of outcomes and length of follow-up varied widely. Effects were inconclusive, except for outdoor or walking activities showing an overall positive impact on physical outcomes. For eight interventions, we identified evidence on implementation barriers (b) and facilitators (f), including staff shortage (b), staff time resources (b), or ease of implementation for staff (f) and adaptability of interventions (f) or refusal to participate of people with dementia (b). CONCLUSIONS: The results of our review provide a comprehensive overview on types, characteristics and effects of nurse-led physical activity interventions for people with dementia in nursing homes. Based on evidence from a range of study designs and sources, we came to the conclusion that all stakeholders involved considered physical activity interventions for people with dementia as useful and relevant. Outcome measures varied widely and a clear conclusion on effectiveness remains open.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansDementiaExerciseNursing Homes
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy80/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations2
Citations/Year2.0
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score2.80
Normalized Score0.69
Related Supplements
Nurse-led physical activity interventions for people with de... | Panacea Index