Multi-professional and multi-dimensional group education--a key to action in elderly persons

Disabil Rehabil. 2013 Mar;35(5):427-35. doi: 10.3109/09638288.2012.697249. Epub 2012 Jul 17.

Abstract

Purpose: This study was intended to evaluate a multi-professional health-promoting and disease-preventive intervention organized as multi-professional senior group meetings, which addressed home-dwelling, independently living, cognitively intact elderly persons (80±), by exploring the participants' experiences of the intervention.

Method: The focus group methodology was used to interview a total of 20 participants. The informants had participated in four multi-professional senior group meetings at which information about the ageing process and preventive strategies for enhancing health were discussed.

Results: The overall finding was that the elderly persons involved in the intervention lived in the present, but that the supportive environment together with learning a preventive approach contributed to the participants' experiencing the senior meetings as a key to action.

Conclusions: Elderly persons who are independent may have difficulty accepting information about preventing risks to health. However, group education with a multi-professional approach may be a successful model for achieving an exchange of knowledge, which may possibly empower the participants, give them role models, the opportunity to learn from each other and a sense of sharing problems with people in similar circumstances.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Activities of Daily Living
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Cooperative Behavior
  • Female
  • Focus Groups
  • Frail Elderly / psychology*
  • Health Education / methods*
  • Health Education / organization & administration
  • Health Promotion / methods*
  • Humans
  • Interviews as Topic
  • Program Evaluation
  • Quality of Life
  • Social Support