An investigation into activity levels of older people on a rehabilitation ward: an observational study

Abstract

Objectives To investigate the activity levels of older people who were inpatients in a rehabilitation ward.

Design Twelve-hour sessions of continuous observation of each subject, over three consecutive weekdays, established activity levels in various categories.

Setting Designated older people rehabilitation ward in a Medicine for the Elderly Unit.

Participants Convenience sample of six subjects.

Main outcome measures Time spent in various, pre-determined activity categories was monitored.

Results Activity levels in the ward were low, with subjects spending 19% of the observed time sleeping and a further 46% inactive. Less than 1% of the day involved self-directed physical activity. Basic care took up 16% of the day but intervention by members of the rehabilitation team constituted less than 2% of the subjects’ day.

Conclusion Due to methodological limitations, the results of this study cannot be generalized to the whole population of older people in rehabilitation units. However, it has created a baseline from which changes could be made to improve rehabilitation services in this unit, and highlighted issues that are likely to be common in other rehabilitation settings. Moreover, a starting point for further investigation into reasons for lack of activity and how to increase activity to an effective and beneficial level has been established.

Citation

An investigation into activity levels of older people on a rehabilitation ward: an observational study
Fiona Patterson, Valerie Blair, Anne Currie, William Reid
Physiotherapy - March 2005 (Vol. 91, Issue 1, Pages 28-34, DOI: 10.1016/j.physio.2004.06.005)