Walking With Meaning

Physical activity is beneficial for people with dementia, but little research explores subjective experiences of physical activity in this population. Interpretive description guided the analysis of 26 interviews conducted with 12 people with dementia. Three themes described the subjective meaning o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jennifer McDuff, Alison Phinney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2015-09-01
Series:Global Qualitative Nursing Research
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2333393615605116
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spelling doaj-9a59020eb11c4ee0b59f2b1ea8ac1f4f2020-11-25T02:59:51ZengSAGE PublishingGlobal Qualitative Nursing Research2333-39362015-09-01210.1177/233339361560511610.1177_2333393615605116Walking With MeaningJennifer McDuff0Alison Phinney1Fraser Health Authority, Surrey, British Columbia, CanadaUniversity of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, CanadaPhysical activity is beneficial for people with dementia, but little research explores subjective experiences of physical activity in this population. Interpretive description guided the analysis of 26 interviews conducted with 12 people with dementia. Three themes described the subjective meaning of everyday physical activity: Participants were attracted to activity because it improved physical well-being, provided social connections, gave opportunity to be in nature, and provided structure and focus; participants experienced impediments to activity because of physical discomfort, environmental factors, lack of enthusiasm, and memory loss; and participants made adjustments by choosing walking over other activities and by being active with others. Results show that physical activity remains important for people with dementia, although they encounter barriers. They may prefer walking with others as a form of activity. Findings could influence how nurses conceptualize wandering and suggest that walking programs could be well received by people with dementia.https://doi.org/10.1177/2333393615605116
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer McDuff
Alison Phinney
spellingShingle Jennifer McDuff
Alison Phinney
Walking With Meaning
Global Qualitative Nursing Research
author_facet Jennifer McDuff
Alison Phinney
author_sort Jennifer McDuff
title Walking With Meaning
title_short Walking With Meaning
title_full Walking With Meaning
title_fullStr Walking With Meaning
title_full_unstemmed Walking With Meaning
title_sort walking with meaning
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Global Qualitative Nursing Research
issn 2333-3936
publishDate 2015-09-01
description Physical activity is beneficial for people with dementia, but little research explores subjective experiences of physical activity in this population. Interpretive description guided the analysis of 26 interviews conducted with 12 people with dementia. Three themes described the subjective meaning of everyday physical activity: Participants were attracted to activity because it improved physical well-being, provided social connections, gave opportunity to be in nature, and provided structure and focus; participants experienced impediments to activity because of physical discomfort, environmental factors, lack of enthusiasm, and memory loss; and participants made adjustments by choosing walking over other activities and by being active with others. Results show that physical activity remains important for people with dementia, although they encounter barriers. They may prefer walking with others as a form of activity. Findings could influence how nurses conceptualize wandering and suggest that walking programs could be well received by people with dementia.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2333393615605116
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