Dance for people with chronic respiratory disease: a qualitative study
Dance for people with chronic respiratory disease: a qualitative study
Objectives: to explore the experiences and perceived impact on health and well-being related to participation in a dance group for people with chronic respiratory disease (CRD).
Design: an exploratory qualitative study using thematic analysis of semistructured interviews.
Setting: a community dance group in a UK health centre.
Participants: convenience sample of long-term dance group participants.
Intervention: weekly community dance sessions designed for people with breathlessness, lasting 75 min, led by a trained community dance leader.
Results: convenience sample of eight participants, six females, aged 57–87 years (mean 75), with a median 2-year attendance at weekly dance sessions. Long-term attendance was driven by strongly held beliefs regarding the health and well-being benefits of participation. Four key themes were identified: dance as (1) a holistically beneficial activity, with physical and psychosocial health benefits including improved or maintained physical fitness and psychological well-being, and reduced need for healthcare; (2) an integral part of their life; (3) an enjoyable activity; and (4) a source of deep social cohesion.
Conclusions: dance group participants perceived a broad range of health benefits of relevance to the biopsychosocial impacts of their respiratory disease. The themes identified are useful in the ongoing planning and evaluation of dance as a holistic complex intervention for people with CRD. Further research is required to assess the extent of health impacts identified, and how dance might be most effectively placed as an option in the management of CRD.
Trial registration number: NCT04006015.
Philip, Keir Elmslie James
ae843582-a069-45bc-ad81-537a1f8baca4
Lewis, Adam
71c83b66-d847-4aee-b716-b04d6de51450
Williams, Sian
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Buttery, Sara Catherine
d05066dd-f492-459f-b9f1-092c34208549
Polkey, Michael I.
4f841dc9-9b94-4021-bbfc-64092cddc7b6
Man, William
ef30a187-66e3-4781-b835-b034dbd1efda
Fancourt, Daisy
c2609458-943e-4c2e-a71f-ef79c0695ca9
Hopkinson, Nicholas S.
91e9a2af-8ab3-4671-b766-761e82bd5310
October 2020
Philip, Keir Elmslie James
ae843582-a069-45bc-ad81-537a1f8baca4
Lewis, Adam
71c83b66-d847-4aee-b716-b04d6de51450
Williams, Sian
f53468f4-b3a4-4e56-a756-cf7b048173ee
Buttery, Sara Catherine
d05066dd-f492-459f-b9f1-092c34208549
Polkey, Michael I.
4f841dc9-9b94-4021-bbfc-64092cddc7b6
Man, William
ef30a187-66e3-4781-b835-b034dbd1efda
Fancourt, Daisy
c2609458-943e-4c2e-a71f-ef79c0695ca9
Hopkinson, Nicholas S.
91e9a2af-8ab3-4671-b766-761e82bd5310
Philip, Keir Elmslie James, Lewis, Adam and Williams, Sian
,
et al.
(2020)
Dance for people with chronic respiratory disease: a qualitative study.
BMJ Open, 10 (10), [e038719].
(doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2020-038719).
Abstract
Objectives: to explore the experiences and perceived impact on health and well-being related to participation in a dance group for people with chronic respiratory disease (CRD).
Design: an exploratory qualitative study using thematic analysis of semistructured interviews.
Setting: a community dance group in a UK health centre.
Participants: convenience sample of long-term dance group participants.
Intervention: weekly community dance sessions designed for people with breathlessness, lasting 75 min, led by a trained community dance leader.
Results: convenience sample of eight participants, six females, aged 57–87 years (mean 75), with a median 2-year attendance at weekly dance sessions. Long-term attendance was driven by strongly held beliefs regarding the health and well-being benefits of participation. Four key themes were identified: dance as (1) a holistically beneficial activity, with physical and psychosocial health benefits including improved or maintained physical fitness and psychological well-being, and reduced need for healthcare; (2) an integral part of their life; (3) an enjoyable activity; and (4) a source of deep social cohesion.
Conclusions: dance group participants perceived a broad range of health benefits of relevance to the biopsychosocial impacts of their respiratory disease. The themes identified are useful in the ongoing planning and evaluation of dance as a holistic complex intervention for people with CRD. Further research is required to assess the extent of health impacts identified, and how dance might be most effectively placed as an option in the management of CRD.
Trial registration number: NCT04006015.
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e038719.full
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 September 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 October 2020
Published date: October 2020
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 488706
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488706
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: fcf4d6ac-0916-4017-a760-6b2d6444339e
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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2024 16:44
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 02:14
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Contributors
Author:
Keir Elmslie James Philip
Author:
Adam Lewis
Author:
Sian Williams
Author:
Sara Catherine Buttery
Author:
Michael I. Polkey
Author:
William Man
Author:
Daisy Fancourt
Author:
Nicholas S. Hopkinson
Corporate Author: et al.
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