Fourteen participants (10 women, 4 men) from the LiLL-OPM study were invited to take part in a semi-structured interview. None of the patients who were invited declined participation. Interviews lasted 35 ± 10 (mean ± standard deviation [SD]) minutes with most interviews (12/14) taking place in participants’ own homes. Two participants were interviewed via telephone (n = 1) or video call (n = 1) and one participant’s informal carer was present during the interview. Participants were aged between 69–92 years (mean ± SD; 82 ± 7 years). Based on the Fried frailty criteria, 13 (93%) participants were pre-frail (n = 3) or frail (n = 10). Twelve participants (86%) were living with MLTC. All participants had recently experienced a decline in their health status as the reason for referral to the Older People’s Medicine Day Unit. The characteristics of the sample are summarised in Table 1.
Table 1
Characteristics of the sample
| All (n = 14) | Men (n = 4) | Women (n = 10) |
Age (years) | 82 [7] | 84 [7] | 81 [7] |
Ethnicity |
White British | 13 (93) | 4 (100) | 9 (90) |
Asian or Asian British – Indian | 1 (7) | 0 (0) | 1 (10) |
Number of long-term conditions |
0–1 (No MLTC) | 2 (14) | 2 (50) | 0 (0) |
≥ 2 (MLTC) | 12 (86) | 2 (50) | 10 (100) |
Number of medications |
0–4 | 3 (21) | 1 (25) | 2 (20) |
≥ 5 | 11 (79) | 3 (75) | 8 (80) |
Fried frailty score |
0 (Non-frail) | 1 (7) | 1 (25) | 0 (0) |
1–2 (Pre-frail) | 3 (21) | 0 (0) | 3 (30) |
3+ (Frail) | 10 (71) | 3 (75) | 7 (70) |
SARC-F |
0 | 1 (7) | 1 (25) | 0 (0) |
1 | 1 (7) | 0 (0) | 1 (10) |
2 | 1 (7) | 0 (0) | 1 (10) |
3 | 1 (7) | 0 (0) | 1 (10) |
4+ | 10 (71) | 3 (75) | 7 (70) |
Accommodation status |
Standard housing | 11 (79) | 3 (75) | 8 (80) |
Sheltered housing with warden | 2 (14) | 1 (25) | 1 (10) |
Assisted living (extra care) | 1 (7) | 0 (0) | 1 (10) |
Physical activity |
Mean acceleration (mg)* | 13.79 [4.11] | 10.53 [2.71] | 15.24 [3.86] |
Values shown are mean [standard deviation; SD] or count (%). SARC-F: Strength, Assistance, Rise, Climb – Falls questionnaire. Simplified Questionnaire to Rapidly Diagnose Sarcopenia * n = 13 (one participant [F] declined the physical activity assessment) |
The thematic analysis generated three themes:1) a lack of awareness and understanding of RE, 2) a self-perceived inability to perform RE; physical and psychological barriers and 3) willingness to perform RE under expert guidance. Direct quotations are presented within the text to illustrate our findings (Sex, ID number).
Theme 1: A lack of awareness and understanding of resistance exercise
There was a general lack of awareness and understanding of RE, with most participants having never heard of the term and being unaware of its potential benefits.
“No, what is it?” (Female, Aged 90)
“I don’t know what exactly it means…I’m not sure if I am up to all that you know” (Female, Aged 92)
“It wouldn’t do you any good to lift heavy things, they tell you that, don’t lift heavy things you know, if you read through those magazines it tells you things like that” (Female, Aged 77)
Participants reported their own individual interpretations and preferences for physical activity and exercise. For example, only one participant performed structured exercise, whilst others viewed exercise as activities such as housework, gardening, and daily routine chores. Participants described performing adequate exercise, and resistance exercise as unnecessary.
“I’m just happy to go to the physiotherapy, I don’t want to get into too much, I really don’t, I mean I do everything for myself in this house, don’t get any help at all so I do a lot of exercise with that” (Female, Aged 81)
“I think the amount of exercise I get and the workings I do, I think is far greater than what I would get going to a gym for half an hour twice a week…and much heavier than what they would let me do at a gym I would think” (Male, Aged 86)
Age-associated limitations were linked with the lack of perceived benefits of resistance exercise and that resistance exercise would be more suited to younger adults living without long-term conditions.
“I don’t know if there would be any effects, maybe it would have an effect on a younger person not having arthritis” (Female, Aged 92)
“When you’re younger its fine but as you get older it’s just pain literally everywhere whatever you do, I can’t pick up anything without dropping it” (Female, Aged 78)
Despite the lack of awareness and understanding of resistance exercise, most participants had previously received physiotherapy and used resistance bands to help with their physical health.
“She’s giving me plastic thing [resistance band]…I think they do some benefit for me because you see I can work from my foot up to here and then I can pull like that with whatever she’s given me…I think she thought if I do that sort of exercises, so it would make me…more useful and more active” (Female, Aged 69)
The participants emphasised the importance of the benefits of physiotherapy to help with their disability and in maintaining their independence. For some, they described a preference for continuing with physiotherapy as opposed to engaging in any further exercise.
Theme 2: A self-perceived inability to perform resistance exercise; physical and psychological barriers
Physical and psychological barriers were emphasised as factors contributing to participants self-perceived inability to perform RE. Some of the participants felt that their age was associated with their inability to do resistance exercise.
“I’m too old to be exercising, that’s the way I feel, I haven’t got the strength in us…I couldn’t go and lift weights” (Female, Aged 86)
This was explained as having a perceived lack of strength to perform RE and a decline in physical strength due to ageing. This was associated with the lack of awareness and understanding of the benefits of RE.
“Where are you going to get the strength to do that? Pushing against something…you just get weaker and weaker, don’t you? As you get older, you’ve got no push in you” (Male, Aged 87)
“I’ve got arthritis I have no strength in my hand because of my arthritis, I find it very difficult to push a button you know so I think I’m past all that… not weightlifting. Weightlifting I don’t want to try… I have never done it” (Female, Aged 92)
Barriers to engagement were predominantly related to living with health conditions and experiencing disability including arthritis, pain, poor eyesight, and mobility issues.
“There’s not a lot I can do really…because with that hand being like that and you’re holding on… my eyesight as well…because of the walking with this [zimmer frame] and just taking my time and everything is slow…I think I’m passed doing anything…” Female, Aged 90)
Participants were concerned that they might cause themselves more damage, and they expressed a fear of falling due to balance issues and a fear of causing themselves an injury.
“It worries us if I broke a finger and something, my hands are bad enough, but if something happened to them…if I injured myself… I’m fearful of hurting myself… sometimes if I go to do something, I think no I’m not doing that because I’m just going to fall and I’ll be on my own, because I’m on my own this is one of the big worries” (Female, Aged 81)
“I want to walk around and someone with me…because you see I’m a bit scared if I have a fall… I always want my husband with me…I feel like getting active again if I never had falls…I’m a bit scared” (Female, Aged 69)
Other barriers to engaging in RE included a lack of motivation and a lack of energy to perform the exercises.
“You need the motivation, mainly to do it, the lack of motivation and the lack of energy… you just don’t have that same incentive… bit more energy which I have none what’s so ever” (Female, Aged 78)
These factors were associated with an unwillingness to increase activity levels or engage in RE.
Theme 3: Willingness to perform resistance exercise under expert guidance
Participants stated that they would be willing to try RE if they were advised to by a healthcare professional.
“Yeah well, I probably would try” (Female, Aged 81)
“I would say okay I would give it a go” (Female, Aged 81)
This advice would need to be supported by a personalised health assessment from a healthcare professional. Assessing their health conditions prior to prescribing RE would provide them with reassurance that it’s safe to perform the exercises.
“If the doctor was saying to me ‘there’s nothing sinister going on and you’re fine, just try and get your body motivated’ then I would do that, but I’m frightened to do this in case I’m hurting something else… if he said it was all right for my bones, I would be saying ‘right I’ll give it a go’…I mean I’ve got to see the osteoporosis at the clinic…if they said it was all right [physiotherapist advice], yeah, I would do that” (Female, Aged 79)
Some of the participants expressed the need for information about RE prior to commencing an exercise programme. For example, what this would entail before deciding on their engagement.
“I just want to know what it’s about and if I found it was okay and helping I would do it, but I never say yes until I know what it involves… if I think it might be good, I’ll give it a go…if I benefit from it, well do it” (Female, Aged 81)
Knowing that an exercise programme had been adjusted to their own individual health needs and having an understanding as to how the programme would personally benefit them, would encourage the older adults to perform the exercise.
“It would be the doctor doing his work because I’m sure he will assess me beforehand…but I think if he was to look at everything going on within my body at the moment…and surely he would make an assessment before he would say that to me” (Female, Aged 78)
For the older adults with mobility problems and a fear of falling they would need to feel supported when performing the exercise and for some, this meant a reliance on informal carers.