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Barriers and facilitators to pressure ulcer prevention behaviours by older people living in their own homes and their lay carers: a qualitative study.

BMJ Open 2024 March 19
OBJECTIVE: To identify barriers and facilitators to pressure ulcer prevention behaviours in community-dwelling older people and their lay carers.

DESIGN: Theoretically informed qualitative interviews with two-phase, deductive then inductive, thematic analysis.

SETTING: The study was conducted in one geographical region in the UK, spanning several community National Health Service Trusts.

PARTICIPANTS: Community-dwelling older patients at risk of pressure ulcer development (n=10) and their lay carers (n=10).

RESULTS: Six themes and subthemes were identified: (1) knowledge and beliefs about consequences (nature, source, timing and taboo); (2) social and professional role and influences (who does what, conflicting advice and disagreements); (3) motivation and priorities (competing self-care needs and carer physical ability); (4) memory; (5) emotion (carer exhaustion and isolation, carergiver role conflict and patient feelings) and (6) environment (human resource shortage and equipment).

CONCLUSIONS: There is minimal research in pressure ulcer prevention in community-dwelling older people. This study has robustly applied the theoretical domains framework to understanding barriers and facilitators to pressure ulcer prevention behaviours. Our findings will support co-design of strategies to promote preventative behaviours and are likely to be transferable to comparable healthcare systems nationally and internationally.

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