4.6 Review

Barriers and facilitators to exercise in haemodialysis patients: A systematic review of qualitative studies

Journal

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING
Volume 77, Issue 12, Pages 4679-4692

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jan.14960

Keywords

barriers; facilitators; dialysis staff members; exercise; haemodialysis; qualitative research; systematic review

Categories

Funding

  1. Shaanxi Provincial Key Research and Development Program [2021SF-278]

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This systematic review identified five analytical themes related to barriers and facilitators to exercise in haemodialysis patients: disease distress, perception of exercise, environmental restrictions, spirit strength, and hospital management. Future intervention measures and health policies should focus on strengthening facilitators and reducing barriers to promote exercise practice among haemodialysis patients. The study highlights the importance of utilizing facilitators and addressing barriers to improve the exercise levels of haemodialysis patients.
Aims The purpose of this systematic review is to synthesize the results of qualitative research and to identify the barriers and facilitators to exercise in haemodialysis patients from the perspectives of haemodialysis patients, caregivers and dialysis staff members. Design Systematic review of qualitative studies. Data sources Qualitative studies were extracted from MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, CINAHL, PsycINFO, PubMed, CBM, CNKI and WanFang Database from inception of each database until July 2020. Qualitative research and mixed method research including barriers and/or facilitators to exercise in haemodialysis patients were included. Review methods The systematic search method SPIDER (sample, phenomenon of interest, design, evaluation, research type) was used. Thematic synthesis of qualitative data was used. Results 284 studies were screened and 10 studies published between 2007 and 2020 were finally included in this review. The review included 180 patients, 70 dialysis staff members and seven caregivers. Five analytical themes were identified: disease distress, perception of exercise, environmental restrictions, spirit strength and hospital management. Barriers include disease distress, perception of exercise (security issue), environmental restrictions and hospital management. Facilitators include perception of exercise (exercise being considered beneficial, preference for exercise) and spirit strength (from religious beliefs). It is the spiritual strength (from family and friends, from dialysis staff members) that is both the barrier and the facilitator. Conclusion There are many barriers in popularizing exercise among haemodialysis patients. Future intervention measures and health policies should strengthen the facilitators and reduce the barriers, so as to promote the clinical practice of exercise for haemodialysis patients. Impact This review summarizes the barriers and facilitators to exercise in haemodialysis patients. The results of this study have an impact on research, practice and health policy setting. The exercise level of haemodialysis patients can be improved by using the facilitators and solving the barriers.

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