Engagement with behaviour change in people with mild cognitive impairment and mild frailty: a qualitative study.

Many older people experience Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), which may compromise the effectiveness of health promotion programmes.

We explored engagement with behaviour change among participants scoring 18-25 on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment receiving HomeHealth, a health promotion intervention supporting older adults with mild frailty to maintain independence in England ().

Of the 46 semistructured process evaluation interviews, 29 participants scored in the MCI range, purposively selected for demographic characteristics and degrees of cognitive impairment and the seven support workers.

Thematic analysis resulted in three themes: Navigating the impact of MCI; Addressing memory as a goal in the intervention; and Adapting Behaviour Change Interventions for MCI. Participants had varied opinions about whether their memory was problematic and whether anything could be done to help. Many reported not discussing memory concerns with support workers. Barriers to engagement in behaviour change included limited social support and not acknowledging memory problems. Facilitators included setting goals which increased or were linked to existing health behaviours, using reminders/prompts and actively involving family members.

Implementing these facilitators into existing and new health promotion interventions delivered to older adults, with suspected but unacknowledged MCI, could overcome the current barriers people with MCI face when trying to engage and benefit from interventions.

ISRCTN54268283.
Mental Health
Access
Care/Management
Advocacy
Education

Authors

Rookes Rookes, Frost Frost, Barrado-Martín Barrado-Martín, Catchpole Catchpole, Armstrong Armstrong, Gardner Gardner, Gould Gould, Cooper Cooper, Hammond Hammond, Marston Marston, Walters Walters
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