Feasibility and implementation fidelity of a co‑designed intervention to promote in‑hospital mobility among older medical patients—the WALK‑Copenhagen project (WALK‑Cph)

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Feasibility and implementation fidelity of a co‑designed intervention to promote in‑hospital mobility among older medical patients—the WALK‑Copenhagen project (WALK‑Cph). / Pedersen, Britt Stævnsbo; Wassar Kirk, Jeanette; Olesen, Maren Kathrine; Grønfeldt, Birk Mygind; Stefánsdóttir, Nina Thórný; Brødsgaard, Rasmus; Tjørnhøj-Thomsen, Tine; Nilsen, Per; Andersen, Ove; Bandholm, Thomas Quaade; Pedersen, Mette Merete.

I: Pilot and Feasibility Studies, Bind 8, Nr. 80, 80, 2022.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Pedersen, BS, Wassar Kirk, J, Olesen, MK, Grønfeldt, BM, Stefánsdóttir, NT, Brødsgaard, R, Tjørnhøj-Thomsen, T, Nilsen, P, Andersen, O, Bandholm, TQ & Pedersen, MM 2022, 'Feasibility and implementation fidelity of a co‑designed intervention to promote in‑hospital mobility among older medical patients—the WALK‑Copenhagen project (WALK‑Cph)', Pilot and Feasibility Studies, bind 8, nr. 80, 80. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40814-022-01033-z

APA

Pedersen, B. S., Wassar Kirk, J., Olesen, M. K., Grønfeldt, B. M., Stefánsdóttir, N. T., Brødsgaard, R., Tjørnhøj-Thomsen, T., Nilsen, P., Andersen, O., Bandholm, T. Q., & Pedersen, M. M. (2022). Feasibility and implementation fidelity of a co‑designed intervention to promote in‑hospital mobility among older medical patients—the WALK‑Copenhagen project (WALK‑Cph). Pilot and Feasibility Studies, 8(80), [80]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40814-022-01033-z

Vancouver

Pedersen BS, Wassar Kirk J, Olesen MK, Grønfeldt BM, Stefánsdóttir NT, Brødsgaard R o.a. Feasibility and implementation fidelity of a co‑designed intervention to promote in‑hospital mobility among older medical patients—the WALK‑Copenhagen project (WALK‑Cph). Pilot and Feasibility Studies. 2022;8(80). 80. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40814-022-01033-z

Author

Pedersen, Britt Stævnsbo ; Wassar Kirk, Jeanette ; Olesen, Maren Kathrine ; Grønfeldt, Birk Mygind ; Stefánsdóttir, Nina Thórný ; Brødsgaard, Rasmus ; Tjørnhøj-Thomsen, Tine ; Nilsen, Per ; Andersen, Ove ; Bandholm, Thomas Quaade ; Pedersen, Mette Merete. / Feasibility and implementation fidelity of a co‑designed intervention to promote in‑hospital mobility among older medical patients—the WALK‑Copenhagen project (WALK‑Cph). I: Pilot and Feasibility Studies. 2022 ; Bind 8, Nr. 80.

Bibtex

@article{b890f9ef4f6d4de99770805569cfd7e6,
title = "Feasibility and implementation fidelity of a co‑designed intervention to promote in‑hospital mobility among older medical patients—the WALK‑Copenhagen project (WALK‑Cph)",
abstract = "BackgroundMobility interventions can prevent functional decline among older patients, but implementation of such interventions may be complicated by barriers in the clinical setting. The WALK-Copenhagen project (WALK-Cph) is aimed at promoting a 24-h mobility among older medical patients during hospitalization. The WALK-Cph intervention was co-designed by researchers and stakeholders to tailor the intervention to the clinical context. The aim of this study was to investigate the feasibility and implementation fidelity of the WALK-Cph intervention before evaluating clinical effectiveness in a randomized controlled trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03825497).MethodsThe WALK-Cph intervention consisted of six components: a welcome folder explaining the importance of in-hospital activity, a WALK-plan prescribing up to three daily walking sessions during and after hospitalization, a WALK-path in the hallway that patients were motivated to use daily, exercise posters in the hallways and bedrooms, self-service on beverages and clothes, and discharge with a WALK-plan. The present study reports on phase 2 of WALK-Cph and consists of a feasibility and a fidelity component. The study was conducted at the two WALK-Cph intervention departments after the initiation of the WALK-Cph intervention. A cohort of older medical patients (+65) was recruited for the feasibility study to assess recruitment and data collection procedures and the method for assessment of activity. Simultaneously, implementation fidelity was assessed by observing clinical practice and intervention delivery at the intervention departments.ResultsA feasibility cohort of 48 patients was included. Inclusion was considered feasible with recruitment rates between 62% and 70% of all eligible patients. Also, data collection was conducted without obstacles, and all patients accepted to wear activity monitors. The fidelity observations showed that three of the six intervention components were partially implemented as planned whereas three components were not implemented as planned.ConclusionThe WALK-Cph intervention was found feasible, and although the intervention was not implemented with fidelity, the level of fidelity was considered sufficient to continue with further testing of the WALK-Cph intervention in a large-scale trial.",
author = "Pedersen, {Britt St{\ae}vnsbo} and {Wassar Kirk}, Jeanette and Olesen, {Maren Kathrine} and Gr{\o}nfeldt, {Birk Mygind} and Stef{\'a}nsd{\'o}ttir, {Nina Th{\'o}rn{\'y}} and Rasmus Br{\o}dsgaard and Tine Tj{\o}rnh{\o}j-Thomsen and Per Nilsen and Ove Andersen and Bandholm, {Thomas Quaade} and Pedersen, {Mette Merete}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1186/s40814-022-01033-z",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "Pilot and Feasibility Studies",
issn = "2055-5784",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "80",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Feasibility and implementation fidelity of a co‑designed intervention to promote in‑hospital mobility among older medical patients—the WALK‑Copenhagen project (WALK‑Cph)

AU - Pedersen, Britt Stævnsbo

AU - Wassar Kirk, Jeanette

AU - Olesen, Maren Kathrine

AU - Grønfeldt, Birk Mygind

AU - Stefánsdóttir, Nina Thórný

AU - Brødsgaard, Rasmus

AU - Tjørnhøj-Thomsen, Tine

AU - Nilsen, Per

AU - Andersen, Ove

AU - Bandholm, Thomas Quaade

AU - Pedersen, Mette Merete

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - BackgroundMobility interventions can prevent functional decline among older patients, but implementation of such interventions may be complicated by barriers in the clinical setting. The WALK-Copenhagen project (WALK-Cph) is aimed at promoting a 24-h mobility among older medical patients during hospitalization. The WALK-Cph intervention was co-designed by researchers and stakeholders to tailor the intervention to the clinical context. The aim of this study was to investigate the feasibility and implementation fidelity of the WALK-Cph intervention before evaluating clinical effectiveness in a randomized controlled trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03825497).MethodsThe WALK-Cph intervention consisted of six components: a welcome folder explaining the importance of in-hospital activity, a WALK-plan prescribing up to three daily walking sessions during and after hospitalization, a WALK-path in the hallway that patients were motivated to use daily, exercise posters in the hallways and bedrooms, self-service on beverages and clothes, and discharge with a WALK-plan. The present study reports on phase 2 of WALK-Cph and consists of a feasibility and a fidelity component. The study was conducted at the two WALK-Cph intervention departments after the initiation of the WALK-Cph intervention. A cohort of older medical patients (+65) was recruited for the feasibility study to assess recruitment and data collection procedures and the method for assessment of activity. Simultaneously, implementation fidelity was assessed by observing clinical practice and intervention delivery at the intervention departments.ResultsA feasibility cohort of 48 patients was included. Inclusion was considered feasible with recruitment rates between 62% and 70% of all eligible patients. Also, data collection was conducted without obstacles, and all patients accepted to wear activity monitors. The fidelity observations showed that three of the six intervention components were partially implemented as planned whereas three components were not implemented as planned.ConclusionThe WALK-Cph intervention was found feasible, and although the intervention was not implemented with fidelity, the level of fidelity was considered sufficient to continue with further testing of the WALK-Cph intervention in a large-scale trial.

AB - BackgroundMobility interventions can prevent functional decline among older patients, but implementation of such interventions may be complicated by barriers in the clinical setting. The WALK-Copenhagen project (WALK-Cph) is aimed at promoting a 24-h mobility among older medical patients during hospitalization. The WALK-Cph intervention was co-designed by researchers and stakeholders to tailor the intervention to the clinical context. The aim of this study was to investigate the feasibility and implementation fidelity of the WALK-Cph intervention before evaluating clinical effectiveness in a randomized controlled trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03825497).MethodsThe WALK-Cph intervention consisted of six components: a welcome folder explaining the importance of in-hospital activity, a WALK-plan prescribing up to three daily walking sessions during and after hospitalization, a WALK-path in the hallway that patients were motivated to use daily, exercise posters in the hallways and bedrooms, self-service on beverages and clothes, and discharge with a WALK-plan. The present study reports on phase 2 of WALK-Cph and consists of a feasibility and a fidelity component. The study was conducted at the two WALK-Cph intervention departments after the initiation of the WALK-Cph intervention. A cohort of older medical patients (+65) was recruited for the feasibility study to assess recruitment and data collection procedures and the method for assessment of activity. Simultaneously, implementation fidelity was assessed by observing clinical practice and intervention delivery at the intervention departments.ResultsA feasibility cohort of 48 patients was included. Inclusion was considered feasible with recruitment rates between 62% and 70% of all eligible patients. Also, data collection was conducted without obstacles, and all patients accepted to wear activity monitors. The fidelity observations showed that three of the six intervention components were partially implemented as planned whereas three components were not implemented as planned.ConclusionThe WALK-Cph intervention was found feasible, and although the intervention was not implemented with fidelity, the level of fidelity was considered sufficient to continue with further testing of the WALK-Cph intervention in a large-scale trial.

U2 - 10.1186/s40814-022-01033-z

DO - 10.1186/s40814-022-01033-z

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35397574

VL - 8

JO - Pilot and Feasibility Studies

JF - Pilot and Feasibility Studies

SN - 2055-5784

IS - 80

M1 - 80

ER -

ID: 302814116