Physical Activity Inclusion in Dementia-Friendly Communities: A Mixed Methods Study

Author:

Hadley Rebecca1ORCID,Mathie Elspeth23ORCID,Pike Elizabeth4ORCID,Goodman Claire23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Applied Clinical, Health and Care Research (CACHE), University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, United Kingdom

2. Centre for Research in Public Health and Community Care (CRIPACC), University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, United Kingdom

3. NIHR Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) East of England (EoE), Cambridge, United Kingdom

4. Institute of Sport, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, United Kingdom

Abstract

Dementia-friendly communities (DFCs) are a policy-endorsed approach to community engagement in England that promotes social inclusion to enable people affected by dementia to live well. Research suggests that physical activity is beneficial in encouraging social connection and improving health. A mixed method sequential study design in England involving a national survey (n = 31) and semistructured interviews (n = 65) in three DFCs was carried out. The aim was to understand how DFCs enable people affected by dementia to participate in physical activities. An evaluation framework for DFCs was used to organize and interpret the data, and analysis was informed by the inclusive (social) citizen lens. Findings showed that DFCs offered a range of adapted dementia-inclusive and dementia-specific activities; however, people were not routinely offered information at time of diagnosis. Local authorities (councils) were key to enable access to information and infrastructure change to support sustainable inclusion within their local community.

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Reference53 articles.

1. Hidden no more: Dementia and Disability,2019

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3. Dementia friendly communities key principles,2016

4. Dementia friendly communities. Global developments,2017

5. Copenhagen Consensus statement 2019: Physical activity and ageing;Bangsbo, J.,2019

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