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Age And Ageing

Publication date: 2023-01-08
Volume: 52
Publisher: Oxford University Press (OUP)

Author:

Delgado-Ortiz, Laura
Polhemus, Ashley ; Keogh, Alison ; Sutton, Norman ; Remmele, Werner ; Hansen, Clint ; Kluge, Felix ; Sharrack, Basil ; Becker, Clemens ; Troosters, Thierry ; Maetzler, Walter ; Rochester, Lynn ; Frei, Anja ; Puhan, Milo A ; Garcia-Aymerich, Judith

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Geriatrics & Gerontology, walking, qualitative research, chronic condition, frailty, ageing, older people, PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY, GAIT SPEED, MOBILITY, Humans, Qualitative Research, Anthropology, Cultural, Walking, 1103 Clinical Sciences, 1117 Public Health and Health Services, 1701 Psychology, Geriatrics, 3202 Clinical sciences, 4203 Health services and systems, 5201 Applied and developmental psychology

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: walking is crucial for an active and healthy ageing, but the perspectives of individuals living with walking impairment are still poorly understood. OBJECTIVES: to identify and synthesise evidence describing walking as experienced by adults living with mobility-impairing health conditions and to propose an empirical conceptual framework of walking experience. METHODS: we performed a systematic review and meta-ethnography of qualitative evidence, searching seven electronic databases for records that explored personal experiences of walking in individuals living with conditions of diverse aetiology. Conditions included Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, hip fracture, heart failure, frailty and sarcopenia. Data were extracted, critically appraised using the NICE quality checklist and synthesised using standardised best practices. RESULTS: from 2,552 unique records, 117 were eligible. Walking experience was similar across conditions and described by seven themes: (i) becoming aware of the personal walking experience, (ii) the walking experience as a link between individuals' activities and sense of self, (iii) the physical walking experience, (iv) the mental and emotional walking experience, (v) the social walking experience, (vi) the context of the walking experience and (vii) behavioural and attitudinal adaptations resulting from the walking experience. We propose a novel conceptual framework that visually represents the walking experience, informed by the interplay between these themes. CONCLUSION: a multi-faceted and dynamic experience of walking was common across health conditions. Our conceptual framework of the walking experience provides a novel theoretical structure for patient-centred clinical practice, research and public health.