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Journal Article

Citation

O'Neil J, Dionne N, Marchand S, Cardinal D, Handrigan G, Savard J. Health Promot. Pract. 2024; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, Society for Public Health Education, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/15248399241252807

PMID

38757965

Abstract

Introduction. A fall may impact a person's physical, emotional, and psychological well-being. Fall prevention programs are being implemented to reduce these negative outcomes. However, linguistic barriers in health services may reduce access to such prevention programs. A telehealth fall prevention program was designed to increase access to such programs in French for Francophone minority communities in Canada. This capacity-building project aimed to support community partners to deliver this telehealth program and document strategies used to reach, adopt, and implement the program within various Francophone and Acadian Minority Communities.

METHODS. A sequential explanatory mixed methodology was used to document reach, adoption, and implementation strategies and describe the lived experiences of program facilitators and organization representatives. Reach, adoption, and implementation were documented and analyzed descriptively, while lived experiences were analyzed using content analysis following the Consortium Framework for Implementation Research.

RESULTS. Twelve organization representatives or program facilitators from eight organizations operating in four different provinces participated in the study. Three themes emerged from the qualitative data on reach and adoption: external context, internal context, and capacity building. Four themes were identified as barriers and facilitators to implementation: level of preparation and time management, interpersonal relations and telepresence, exercise facilitation and safety, and technological problem-solving.

CONCLUSION. Using tailored reach and adoption strategies such as prioritizing provinces with higher proportions of needs and training local community program facilitators may lead to the successful implementation of a new telehealth fall prevention program.

RESULTS from this study could potentially inform other primary prevention programs or telehealth program implementation.


Language: en

Keywords

access to health care; aging; community intervention; health promotion; technology

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