4.1 Article

Effects of a dietary self-management programme for community-dwelling older adults: a quasi-experimental design

Journal

SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF CARING SCIENCES
Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages 619-629

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/scs.12375

Keywords

dietary self-management; nutritional status; self-efficacy; health locus of control; rural-urban; older adults

Categories

Funding

  1. Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Linkou, Taiwan [CMRPF 170043]

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RationaleNutritional health plays a crucial role in determining successful ageing and differs by different living area. Although nutritional interventions have long been advocated, little research has directly assessed the effectiveness of nutritional interventions on community-dwelling older adults in urban and rural areas and compared intervention effects on these two populations. Aims and objectivesTo examine the effectiveness of a 12-week dietary self-management programme for salt-, fluid-, fat- and cholesterol-intake behaviours of community-dwelling older adults and to compare these effects in rural- and urban-dwelling older adults. MethodsFor this quasi-experimental two-group study, older adults (65 years old) were recruited from two randomly selected public health centres in a rural north-eastern county and a northern city of Taiwan from January through December 2011. Outcomes included nutritional status, nutritional self-efficacy and health locus of control. Data were collected at baseline and 12 weeks later. To compare changes in outcome variables over time between the control (usual care) and intervention (nutritional programme) groups and between the urban- and rural-dwelling participants in the experimental group, we used generalised estimating equation analysis. ResultsOf the 129 participants, 120 completed this study (58 in the intervention group and 62 in the control group). After 12 weeks, the intervention group had significantly better nutritional status and higher internal health locus of control than the control group. Moreover, older rural participants who received the intervention tended towards higher nutritional self-efficacy and internal health locus of control than their urban counterparts. ConclusionsOur research findings support the positive effect of our nutritional self-management programme for community-dwelling older adults. The knowledge gained from this study can help stakeholders recognise the need for healthcare policy to establish effective strategies and sustainable intervention programmes for this population, especially those living in rural areas.

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