Family members and health care workers' perspectives on motivational factors of participation in physical activity for people with intellectual disability: A qualitative study
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/20232Date
2020-01-21Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Michalsen, Henriette; Wangberg, Silje C; Anke, Audny; Hartvigsen, Gunnar; Jaccheri, Maria Letizia; Arntzen, CathrineAbstract
Method - An abductive qualitative design was used. Social Cognitive Theory constituted the theoretical frame of reference of the study. Two focus group interviews with health care workers and family members and two individual interviews with health care workers were conducted at their workplace. A thematic analysis was performed.
Results - Three main themes were identified. According to support persons, motivation could be promoted at the individual level by fun, mastery, social setting, technology and knowledge about health behaviours. At a contextual level, physical activity was mediated by engagement with support individuals and available resources. At an interactional level, individuals were more motivated if the interaction was featured by joint activities, predictability and the use of rewards.
Conclusions - Motivation for participation in physical activity might be promoted at the individual, contextual and interactional levels. The interactions between individuals with ID and their support persons should work in a supportive way and strengthen mastery experiences. Support and engagement in the context could serve as a prerequisite for motivation and participation in physical activity and should be considered when developing interventions for physical activity for individuals with ID.