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Implementing a digital tool to support meaningful engagement with socially isolated or lonely older adults

Implementing a digital tool to support meaningful engagement with socially isolated or lonely older adults
Implementing a digital tool to support meaningful engagement with socially isolated or lonely older adults
Social isolation and loneliness are significant concerns in community dwelling older adults due to associated poorer health outcomes, inadequate crises responsiveness and increased societal burdens of care and cost. Generating Engagement in Networks Involvement (GENIE) is an online evidence-based, client-centred social network tool piloted by community-aged care services in Sydney, Australia. GENIE facilitates access to community resources, activities and people to extend or re-establish a client's social connections. This study aimed to identify GENIE's potential to maintain and promote social connections in older adults from the perspective of allied health professionals who could deliver GENIE. This qualitative exploratory study involved 33 participants on an emerging placement across two organisations who piloted GENIE. Data included consensus and priority statements produced from six nominal group technique-facilitated discussions, and an inductive thematic analysis of student documentation and all consensus statements. The main findings indicated that participants prioritised GENIE's clinical advantages, implementation barriers and recommendations for future implementation. The inductive thematic analysis revealed the two themes of practice applications, and client and professional experiences when using GENIE. As a time-efficient and personalised intervention, the research team concluded that GENIE could empower service providers to address the overarching needs of clients through rapidly connecting older adults to resources of their interests within the overburdened Australian-aged care system.
0966-0410
Patel, Yasheeka
eaabedd1-f2da-44be-bbd1-d411a54ddc63
Vassilev, Ivaylo
d76a5531-4ddc-4eb2-909b-a2a1068f05f3
du Toit, Sanetta Henrietta Johanna
4b2b1c08-b241-476f-85ef-871a177577a7
Patel, Yasheeka
eaabedd1-f2da-44be-bbd1-d411a54ddc63
Vassilev, Ivaylo
d76a5531-4ddc-4eb2-909b-a2a1068f05f3
du Toit, Sanetta Henrietta Johanna
4b2b1c08-b241-476f-85ef-871a177577a7

Patel, Yasheeka, Vassilev, Ivaylo and du Toit, Sanetta Henrietta Johanna (2022) Implementing a digital tool to support meaningful engagement with socially isolated or lonely older adults. Health & Social Care in the Community. (doi:10.1111/hsc.14090).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Social isolation and loneliness are significant concerns in community dwelling older adults due to associated poorer health outcomes, inadequate crises responsiveness and increased societal burdens of care and cost. Generating Engagement in Networks Involvement (GENIE) is an online evidence-based, client-centred social network tool piloted by community-aged care services in Sydney, Australia. GENIE facilitates access to community resources, activities and people to extend or re-establish a client's social connections. This study aimed to identify GENIE's potential to maintain and promote social connections in older adults from the perspective of allied health professionals who could deliver GENIE. This qualitative exploratory study involved 33 participants on an emerging placement across two organisations who piloted GENIE. Data included consensus and priority statements produced from six nominal group technique-facilitated discussions, and an inductive thematic analysis of student documentation and all consensus statements. The main findings indicated that participants prioritised GENIE's clinical advantages, implementation barriers and recommendations for future implementation. The inductive thematic analysis revealed the two themes of practice applications, and client and professional experiences when using GENIE. As a time-efficient and personalised intervention, the research team concluded that GENIE could empower service providers to address the overarching needs of clients through rapidly connecting older adults to resources of their interests within the overburdened Australian-aged care system.

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Accepted/In Press date: 1 October 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 October 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483162
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483162
ISSN: 0966-0410
PURE UUID: 46acdd4f-5df5-488e-b899-fb7529af5364
ORCID for Ivaylo Vassilev: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2206-8247

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Date deposited: 25 Oct 2023 17:08
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:25

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Contributors

Author: Yasheeka Patel
Author: Ivaylo Vassilev ORCID iD
Author: Sanetta Henrietta Johanna du Toit

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