Still WALKing-FOR: 2-year sustainability of the ‘WALK FOR’ intervention

Author:

Gil Efrat12,Zisberg Anna3,Shadmi Efrat3,Gur-Yaish Nurit4,Shulyaev Ksenya3ORCID,Chayat Yehudith1,Agmon Maayan3

Affiliation:

1. Haemek Medical Center , Afula, Israel

2. Technion Institute of Technology Faculty of Medicine, , Haifa, Israel

3. University of Haifa The Cheryl Spencer Department of Nursing, Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Studies,

4. Oranim Academic College of Education, The Center for Research and Study of Aging, University of Haifa Faculty of Graduate Studies and Continuing Education , , Tivon, Israel

Abstract

Abstract Background low mobility of hospitalised older adults is associated with adverse outcomes and imposes a significant burden on healthcare and welfare systems. Various interventions have been developed to reduce this problem; at present, however, their methodologies and outcomes vary and information is lacking about their long-term sustainability. This study aimed to evaluate the 2-year sustainability of the WALK-FOR (walking for better outcomes and recovery) intervention implemented by teams in acute care medical units. Methods a quasi-experimental three-group comparative design (N = 366): pre-implementation, i.e. control group (n = 150), immediate post-implementation (n = 144) and 2-year post-implementation (n = 72). Results mean participant age was 77.6 years (± 6 standard deviation [SD]) and 45.3% were females. We conducted an analysis of variance test to evaluate the differences in primary outcomes: number of daily steps and self-reported mobility. Levels of mobility improved significantly from the pre-implementation (control) group to the immediate and 2-year post-implementation groups. Daily step count: pre-implementation (median: 1,081, mean: 1,530 SD = 1,506), immediate post-implementation (median: 2,225, mean: 2,724. SD = 1,827) and 2-year post-implementation (median: 1,439, mean: 2,582, SD = 2,390) F = 15.778 P < 0.01. Self-reported mobility: pre-implementation (mean:10.9, SD = 3.5), immediate post-implementation (mean: 12.4, SD = 2.2), 2-year post-implementation (mean: 12.7, SD = 2.2), F = 16.250, P < 0.01. Conclusions the WALK-FOR intervention demonstrates 2-year sustainability. The theory-driven adaptation and reliance on local personnel produce an effective infrastructure for long-lasting intervention. Future studies should evaluate sustainability from a wider perspective to inform further in-hospital intervention development and implementation.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging,General Medicine

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