11 results on '"Pomiersky R"'
Search Results
2. Transition from inpatient rehabilitation to the home environment in cognitively impaired older persons after hip fracture
- Author
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Abel, B, primary, Eckert, T, additional, Pomiersky, R, additional, Dautel, A, additional, Schäufele, M, additional, Pfeiffer, K, additional, and Group, K, additional
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- 2020
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3. [Sarcopenia, physical activity and sedentary behavior among nursing home residents in Germany].
- Author
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Haigis D, Wagner S, Pomiersky R, Matting L, Hahn LS, Eschweiler GW, Thiel A, Frahsa A, Sudeck G, and Nieß AM
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- Humans, Germany epidemiology, Male, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Homes for the Aged statistics & numerical data, Prevalence, Geriatric Assessment, Risk Factors, Sarcopenia epidemiology, Sarcopenia diagnosis, Sedentary Behavior, Nursing Homes statistics & numerical data, Exercise
- Abstract
Background: Residents in nursing homes show a high prevalence of the musculoskeletal syndrome sarcopenia and tend not to achieve current physical activity recommendations., Objective: The aim of this study is to identify differences in physical activity and sedentary behavior of sarcopenic residents compared with nonsarcopenic and presarcopenic residents., Methods: Sarcopenia assessment was performed among 63 nursing home residents in Baden-Wuerttemberg (D) using the European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People 2 specifications. Structured activity sessions (per week), accelerometer-based physical activity (steps/day), and sedentary behavior (percentual/day) were examined. The group comparisons were determined with Kruskal-Wallis tests and Dunn-Bonferroni post hoc tests., Results: Significant differences were found for number of steps (p = 0.005) and percentual sedentary behavior (p = 0.019). Moreover, steps per day presented significant results in group comparison for no sarcopenia (2824.4 [423-14275]) with probable sarcopenia (1703.9 [118-5663]) and confirmed/severe sarcopenia (1571.2 [240-2392]) (both p = 0.022; |r| = 0.34). Sedentary behavior demonstrated significant differences in groups with no sarcopenia (87.9% [69.1-94.3]) and with probable sarcopenia (91.7% [80.4-9835]) (p = 0.018; |r| = 0.35)., Conclusion: Nonsarcopenic residents demonstrated a higher number of steps and lower sedentary behavior compared with presarcopenic and sarcopenic residents. Increasing steps, reducing sedentary behavior and promoting activities of daily living can contribute to the prevention and treatment of sarcopenia in the nursing home setting., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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4. Physical Activity, Sedentary Behavior, and Their Predictors Among Nursing Home Residents-Cross-Sectional Results of the BaSAlt Study.
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Pomiersky R, Matting L, Haigis D, Eschweiler GW, Frahsa A, Niess A, Thiel A, and Sudeck G
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- Humans, Male, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Hand Strength physiology, Body Mass Index, Sedentary Behavior, Nursing Homes, Exercise physiology, Accelerometry
- Abstract
Little is known about physical activity (PA) and sedentary behavior (SB) among nursing home residents although PA is known as a health promoter. This study examined PA, SB, and their predictors among nursing home residents (n = 63). Dependent variables were accelerometry-based PA and SB. Predictor variables included in a path analysis were age, sex, body mass index, Barthel Index, cognitive status (Mini-Mental State Examination), physical performance (hand grip strength and habitual walking speed), and well-being (World Health Organization-5 well-being index). PA was very low (M steps per day = 2,433) and SB was high (M percentage of sedentary time = 89.4%). PA was significantly predicted by age (β = -0.27, p = .008), body mass index (β = -0.29, p = .002), Barthel Index (β = 0.24, p = .040), and hand grip strength (β = 0.30, p = .048). SB was significantly predicted by body mass index (β = 0.27, p = .008) and Barthel Index (β = -0.30, p = .012). Results might be helpful for everyday practice to identify individuals at high risk for low PA and high SB.
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- 2024
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5. A 10-step participatory program for developing, implementing, and evaluating physical activity promoting actions in nursing homes in Germany.
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Hahn LS, Thiel A, Dembeck V, Haigis D, Matting L, Pomiersky R, Eschweiler GW, Nieß AM, Sudeck G, and Frahsa A
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- Humans, Exercise, Interpersonal Relations, Germany, Activities of Daily Living, Nursing Homes
- Abstract
Background: Since multidimensional barriers challenge nursing homes, a socio-ecological approach is needed for physical activity promotion in this setting. So far, little is known about how such an approach can be transferred into the successful development and implementation of PA-promoting actions together with stakeholders on-site. We aimed to investigate the actions and dimensions of PA-promoting actions and their sustainable implementation. To contribute to closing this gap, we present a 10-step program for co-developing and co-evaluating PA-promoting actions in nursing homes through an integrated counselling approach., Methods: We used a multiple case study approach that built upon manifold data sources, collected in 7 nursing homes over 3 years between 2021 and 2023. We collected fieldnotes and photologs from 14 future workshops (2 per home); 7 evaluation workshops (1 per home); 36 individual counsellings (2 sessions per resident), as well as 87 implementation protocols (action type and frequency), 11 evaluation questionnaires (changes among resources, cooperations, and collaborations); 7 goal attainment scales and 18 individual activity schedules. In addition, we retrieved and documented progress information at regular intervals by phone or email., Results: With staff, residents, relatives, and volunteers, we co-developed 112 ideas for PA promotion; from which 54 ideas were implemented and integrated into everyday life, differentiated into "activities of daily living," "structured activities," and "activity-friendly environments."; 18 residents in 4 homes participated in individual counselling to develop individual activity schedules. Eighteen actions were rated as "(much) more successful than expected"; 10 "(much) worse than expected," and 23 "as successful as expected." Three actions were not evaluated., Discussion: The participatory integrated counselling approach led to home-specific actions and promoted implementation into everyday life. The number and dimensions of actions implemented largely depended on the mission and vision of the respective home. The lack of staff could partially be compensated for by involving neighbourhoods, volunteers, and community organisations, such as local clubs., Conclusion: To effectively promote PA in nursing homes, a tailored approach considering structural conditions, locations, volunteer engagement, and organisational visions is essential. Long-lasting partnerships and low-threshold opportunities prove promising. Future research should delve into structural-level change processes and outcomes in this context., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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6. Feasibility of a Geriatric Assessment to Detect and Quantify Sarcopenia and Physical Functioning in German Nursing Home Residents-A Pilot Study.
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Haigis D, Pomiersky R, Altmeier D, Frahsa A, Sudeck G, Thiel A, Eschweiler G, and Nieß AM
- Abstract
Background: Entering into a nursing home leads to increased immobility and further reductions in physical and cognitive functioning. As a result, there is a risk of sarcopenia, which is characterized by loss of muscle strength, muscle mass and physical functioning. To our knowledge, the feasibility of sarcopenia screening has not yet been performed in the German nursing home setting., Methods: For sarcopenia screening, the specifications of EWGSOP2 were applied. The quantification of sarcopenia was performed according to the corresponding cut-off values. The collection of anthropometric data and the morbidity status were recorded. SARC-F, mini-mental state examination, Barthel Index, Short Physical Performance Battery and Timed Up and Go tests were implemented., Results: In one participant, severe sarcopenia could be identified. The quantification was not possible for four participants. A suspicion of sarcopenia was not confirmed in five participants. Only one person was able to perform all assessments., Conclusions: Sarcopenia screening according to EWGSOP2 presented satisfactory feasibility by nursing home residents. However, further tests to assess the physical functioning of the participants often could not be performed. Moreover, inconsistencies in individual assessments became apparent, leading to inconclusive analyses. The recording of sarcopenia prevalence in German nursing homes should be the goal of further research.
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- 2021
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7. Psychometric properties of the German version of the Fear of Falling Questionnaire-revised (FFQ-R) in a sample of older adults after hip or pelvic fracture.
- Author
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Dautel A, Gross M, Abel B, Pomiersky R, Eckert T, Hauer K, Schäufele M, Büchele G, Becker C, and Pfeiffer K
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Accidental Falls, Fear
- Abstract
Background: Identifying patients with maladaptive fear of falling (FOF) is important in the rehabilitation phase after serious fall. The 6-item Fear of Falling Questionnaire-revised (FFQ-R) was seen as promising measurement instrument as it evaluates FOF in a broader way than the one-item-question and independent of physical activities., Aim: The purpose of the analysis was to evaluate the psychometric properties of the translated German FFQ-R., Methods: Back-translation method was applied. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) with diagonally weighted least square estimation was used to verify the two-factor structure. Data were collected during inpatient rehabilitation from hip and pelvic fracture patients [age 84.3 ± 6.2, Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) scores > 23] participating in an RCT (N = 112) and a cross-sectional survey (N = 40)., Results: Internal consistency was 0.78 (Cronbach´s alpha). No floor or ceiling effects were found. Discriminatory power on item level was moderate to good (r = 0.43-0.65). CFA revealed a good model fit and confirmed the two-factor structure. The German FFQ-R was moderately correlated (r = 0.51) with the Short Falls Efficacy Scale-International (Short FES-I) used as a proxy measure for FOF. Missing rates up to 9% for specific items were because some individuals, independent of cognitive level or age, had problems to rate items with conditional statements on possible negative consequences of a fall., Conclusions: Results demonstrated moderate to good psychometric properties similar to the original English version in a comparable sample of fracture patients.
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- 2021
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8. "I Trust in Staff's Creativity"-The Impact of COVID-19 Lockdowns on Physical Activity Promotion in Nursing Homes Through the Lenses of Organizational Sociology.
- Author
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Frahsa A, Altmeier D, John JM, Gropper H, Granz H, Pomiersky R, Haigis D, Eschweiler GW, Nieß AM, Sudeck G, and Thiel A
- Abstract
Objectives: The health-enhancing benefits or regular physical activity (PA) reach into old age. With the emergence of the coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and the associated national lockdowns and restrictions, nursing home residents were restrained from being physically active. In our study, we aimed to assess the impact of the COVID-19-related restrictions on PA promotion in nursing homes from an organizational-sociological lens. Methods: We collected data in eight nursing homes in Germany. Data collection included (i) semistructured interviews focusing on COVID-19-related restrictions and their effects on nursing homes from the home administrators' perspectives; (ii) open-ended surveys with nursing home staff and relatives focusing on daily routines and contact restrictions; and (iii) collection of documents such as care concepts, mission statements, and weekly activity plans. We analyzed all data with a reflexive thematic analysis approach. Results: We identified three stages of COVID-19-related changes in nursing homes that impacted PA promotion, as follows: (1) external closure and search for emergency control, (2) organizational adaptations to create a livable daily life in the internal environment, and (3) slow reintegration of interactions with the external organizational environment. Document analysis revealed that PA promotion was not part of decision programs or internal staff work descriptions. Rather, PA promotion was delegated to external service providers. The assignment of PA promotion to external providers was not structurally anchored in decision programs, which makes PA promotion not sustainable, particularly during unforeseen events that limit access to the organization. During the pandemic, executive staff believed in internal staff to buffer competencies with regard to PA promotion. Thus, executive staff often considered PA promotion relevant, even during the pandemic, but thought that PA promotion is a task that can be fulfilled by unqualified but motivated internal staff. Conclusion: While our study participants showed a high level of coping-capacity belief, it remains unclear which long-term impacts of COVID-19 on PA promotion in nursing homes are to be expected. At the practice level, executive staff in nursing homes that aim to promote PA within their organization should become aware that PA promotion needs to be incorporated into organizational structures to be implemented and continued in challenging times such as in a pandemic., (Copyright © 2020 Frahsa, Altmeier, John, Gropper, Granz, Pomiersky, Haigis, Eschweiler, Nieß, Sudeck and Thiel.)
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- 2020
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9. Increasing Physical Activity in Persons With Dementia: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
- Author
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Pomiersky R, Abel B, Werner C, Lacroix A, Pfeiffer K, Schäufele M, and Hauer K
- Abstract
This study investigated the effectivity and sustainability of a physical activity (PA) promotion and motor training programs and analyzed predictors for PA changes in persons with dementia. A total of 122 participants with mild-to-moderate dementia were randomized to the intervention program designed for persons with dementia (intervention group) or a motor placebo activity (control group). The primary outcome was the Physical Activity Questionnaire for the Elderly assessed at the baseline, after the 3-month intervention, and at a 3-month follow-up. The PA promotion program significantly increased PA in the intervention group compared with the control group during the training intervention phase. Both groups showed an increase in habitual PA when intervention-induced activities were excluded. PA was sustainably increased in both groups at follow-up. Low baseline PA was predictive for increased PA after the intervention and low baseline PA, high motor performance, and low comorbidity for increased PA at follow-up.
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- 2020
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10. Day-to-day variability of multiple sensor-based physical activity parameters in older persons with dementia.
- Author
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Abel B, Pomiersky R, Werner C, Lacroix A, Schäufele M, and Hauer K
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Sedentary Behavior, Time Factors, Walking, Dementia physiopathology, Exercise
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate the day-to-day variability of various sensor-based physical activity (PA) parameters and to analyze effects of weekdays vs. weekend days as well as the influence of concomitant factors (gender, living conditions, cognitive status, physical performance, and level of PA) in multi-morbid, older persons with mild-to-moderate stage dementia., Methods: In 53 participants, PA was recorded on three consecutive days. Day-to-day variability was estimated by calculating intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) for two consecutive days each (Friday-Saturday, Saturday-Sunday)., Results: Almost all non-walking parameters (lying time, sitting time, standing time, active time, inactive time, and sit-to-stand transitions) showed a consistently low day-to-day variability for Friday-Saturday as well as Saturday-Sunday (ICCs: .60-.96) and hence remained almost unaffected by specific days of the week and concomitant factors. Only the sub-analysis by level of PA revealed slightly deviating results (ICCs: .38-.89). The walking parameters (walking time, walking episodes, and steps) revealed a higher day-to-day variability for Friday-Saturday (ICCs: .01-.40) and a generally lower variability for Saturday-Sunday (ICCs: -.08 - .88), also depending on the respective concomitant factors., Conclusions: Two consecutive days are adequate to reliably assess non-walking parameters, whereas walking parameters showed higher day-to-day variability with a relevant influence of type of days and concomitant factors., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
- Full Text
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11. Multifactorial intervention for hip and pelvic fracture patients with mild to moderate cognitive impairment: study protocol of a dual-centre randomised controlled trial (OF-CARE).
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Dautel A, Eckert T, Gross M, Hauer K, Schäufele M, Lacroix A, Hendlmeier I, Abel B, Pomiersky R, Gugenhan J, Büchele G, Reber KC, Becker C, and Pfeiffer K
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- Accidental Falls prevention & control, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Causality, Cognitive Dysfunction psychology, Exercise physiology, Exercise psychology, Exercise Therapy methods, Female, Hip Fractures psychology, Humans, Male, Quality of Life psychology, Self Efficacy, Single-Blind Method, Treatment Outcome, Walking physiology, Walking psychology, Cognitive Dysfunction epidemiology, Cognitive Dysfunction rehabilitation, Hip Fractures epidemiology, Hip Fractures rehabilitation, Pelvic Bones injuries
- Abstract
Background: A hip or pelvic fracture is a major fall-related injury which often causes a decline in mobility performance and physical activity. Over 40% of patients with hip fracture have cognitive impairment or dementia and poorer rehabilitation outcomes than those without cognitive impairment. In this subgroup, there is a lack of evidence on the best practices supporting recovery. The main aim of this study is to investigate the effects of a transitional care intervention after inpatient rehabilitation on physical activity and functional performance in this group of cognitively impaired patients., Methods/design: This dual-centre, randomised controlled trial compares a multifactorial intervention with usual care as control condition. Two hundred and forty community-dwellers (≥ 65 years) with a hip or pelvic fracture and mild to moderate cognitive impairment (MMSE 17-26) are recruited at the end of inpatient rehabilitation. The four-month intervention consists of (a) an individually tailored, progressive home exercise program and physical activity promotion delivered by professional instructors and lay instructors (two home visits per week) and (b) a long-term care counselling approach addressing unmet care needs, pleasurable activities, and caregiver issues if needed. Primary outcome parameters are physical activity, measured as daily walking duration with an accelerometer-based activity monitor (activPAL™) over 72 h, and functional performance, assessed with Short Physical Performance Battery sum scores. Secondary outcome parameters are fear of falling, fall related self-efficacy, falls, quality of life, depression and activity of daily living. Data are collected at the end of rehabilitation, before the intervention at the patient's home (baseline), after four months (post-intervention), and seven months (follow-up). In addition to completer and intent-to-treat analyses of outcomes, economic data and incremental cost-effectiveness are analysed., Discussion: Existing service models of volunteer services and legal counselling provided by care counsellors were considered when developing the intervention protocol. Therefore, it should be feasible to translate and deliver the intervention into real-world practice if it has been demonstrated to be effective., Trial Registration: German Clinical Trials Register, DRKS00008863 (Accessed 17 Apr 2019), ISRCTN registry, ISRCTN69957256 (Accessed 17 Apr 2019).
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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