What do healthcare professionals want from a resource to support person-centred conversations on physical activity? A mixed-methods, user-centric approach to developing educational resources.

REID, Hamish, CATERSON, Jessica, SMITH, Ralph, BALDOCK, James, JONES, Natasha and COPELAND, Robert (2022). What do healthcare professionals want from a resource to support person-centred conversations on physical activity? A mixed-methods, user-centric approach to developing educational resources. BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine, 8, e001280.

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Official URL: https://bmjopensem.bmj.com/content/8/2/e001280
Open Access URL: https://bmjopensem.bmj.com/content/bmjosem/8/2/e00... (Published)
Link to published version:: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001280

Abstract

Objectives: Healthcare is a fundamental action area in population efforts to address the global disease burden from physical inactivity. However, healthcare professionals lack the knowledge, skills and confidence to have regular conversations about physical activity. This study aimed to: (1) understand the requirements of healthcare professionals and patients from a resource to support routine physical activity conversations in clinical consultations and (2) develop such a resource. Methods: This study used codesign principles across two phases, actively involving relevant stakeholders in an iterative development process. The preparatory phase included a scoping literature review and workshops with multidisciplinary healthcare professionals and patients. The Delphi phase included the development of a draft resource, a three-stage modified online Delphi study and an external review. Results: The scoping review highlighted the importance of addressing time restrictions, a behaviour change skill deficit, the need for resources to fit into existing systems and meeting patient expectations. Consultation included 69 participants across two clinical workshops. They recommended using the internet, valued guidance on all aspects of physical activity conversations and were concerned about how to use a person-centred approach. The Delphi phase, including 15 expert participants, met agreement criteria in two stages to develop the resource. Conclusion: This mixed-methods study delivered an online resource that was codesigned with and based on the requirements of healthcare professionals and patients. The resource presents condition-specific ‘1-minute’, ‘5-minute’ and ‘more minute’ person-centred and evidence-based conversation templates on physical activity in an accessible and usable format to meet the needs of real-life clinical practice.

Item Type: Article
Contributors:
Collaborator - Murray, Andrew
Collaborator - Hall, Beverley
Collaborator - Scott-Dempster, Clare
Collaborator - Bownes, George
Collaborator - Kerss, Jim
Collaborator - Foster-Stead, Jo
Collaborator - Lambert, Joanna
Collaborator - Rogers, John
Collaborator - Lightfoot, Joseph
Collaborator - Jenner, Jumbo
Collaborator - Stephens, Lisa
Collaborator - Batt, Mark
Collaborator - Standage, Martyn
Collaborator - Kelly, Paul
Collaborator - Lawson, Vicky
Additional Information: ** Embargo end date: 22-06-2022 ** From BMJ via Jisc Publications Router ** Licence for this article starting on 22-06-2022: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ **Journal IDs: eissn 2055-7647 **Article IDs: publisher-id: bmjsem-2021-001280 **History: published_online 22-06-2022; accepted 09-06-2022; published 06-2022
Uncontrolled Keywords: Original research, 1506, Exercise, Physical activity, Behaviour
Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001280
Page Range: e001280
SWORD Depositor: Colin Knott
Depositing User: Colin Knott
Date Deposited: 28 Jun 2022 12:14
Last Modified: 12 Oct 2023 11:17
URI: https://shura.shu.ac.uk/id/eprint/30386

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