Patrick Manser

Postdoctoral Researcher in Technology-enhanced Training for Brain Health at Karolinska Institute


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Design Considerations for an Exergame-Based Training Intervention for Older Adults With Mild Neurocognitive Disorder: Qualitative Study Including Focus Groups With Experts and Health Care Professionals and Individual Semistructured In-depth Patient Interviews


Journal article


Patrick Manser, Manuela Adcock-Omlin, Eling D de Bruin
JMIR Serious Games, vol. 11, 2023 Jan 5, pp. e37616


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APA   Click to copy
Manser, P., Adcock-Omlin, M., & de Bruin, E. D. (2023). Design Considerations for an Exergame-Based Training Intervention for Older Adults With Mild Neurocognitive Disorder: Qualitative Study Including Focus Groups With Experts and Health Care Professionals and Individual Semistructured In-depth Patient Interviews. JMIR Serious Games, 11, e37616. https://doi.org/10.2196/37616


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Manser, Patrick, Manuela Adcock-Omlin, and Eling D de Bruin. “Design Considerations for an Exergame-Based Training Intervention for Older Adults With Mild Neurocognitive Disorder: Qualitative Study Including Focus Groups With Experts and Health Care Professionals and Individual Semistructured In-Depth Patient Interviews.” JMIR Serious Games 11 (January 5, 2023): e37616.


MLA   Click to copy
Manser, Patrick, et al. “Design Considerations for an Exergame-Based Training Intervention for Older Adults With Mild Neurocognitive Disorder: Qualitative Study Including Focus Groups With Experts and Health Care Professionals and Individual Semistructured In-Depth Patient Interviews.” JMIR Serious Games, vol. 11, Jan. 2023, p. e37616, doi:10.2196/37616.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{manser2023a,
  title = {Design Considerations for an Exergame-Based Training Intervention for Older Adults With Mild Neurocognitive Disorder: Qualitative Study Including Focus Groups With Experts and Health Care Professionals and Individual Semistructured In-depth Patient Interviews},
  year = {2023},
  month = jan,
  day = {5},
  journal = {JMIR Serious Games},
  pages = {e37616},
  volume = {11},
  doi = {10.2196/37616},
  author = {Manser, Patrick and Adcock-Omlin, Manuela and de Bruin, Eling D},
  month_numeric = {1}
}

Abstract:

Background: Exergames have attracted growing interest in the prevention and treatment of neurocognitive disorders. The most effective exergame and training components (ie, exercise and training variables such as frequency, intensity, duration, or volume of training and type and content of specific exergame scenarios) however remain to be established for older adults with mild neurocognitive disorders (mNCDs). Regarding the design and development of novel exergame-based training concepts, it seems of crucial importance to explicitly include the intended users’ perspective by adopting an interactive and participatory design that includes end users throughout different iterative cycles of development.

Objective: This study aimed to determine the capabilities, treatment preferences, and motivators for the training of older adults with mNCD and the perspectives of individuals on training goals and settings and requirements for exergame and training components.

Methods: A qualitative study including expert focus groups and individual semistructured in-depth patient interviews was conducted. Data were transcribed to a written format to perform qualitative content analysis using QCAmap software.

Results: In total, 10 experts and health care professionals (80% females) and 8 older adults with mNCD (38% females; mean age 82.4, SD 6.2 years) were recruited until data saturation was observed.

Conclusions: The psychosocial consequences of patients’ self-perceived cognitive deterioration might be more burdensome than the cognitive changes themselves. Older adults with mNCD prefer integrative forms of training (such as exergaming) and are primarily motivated by enjoyment or fun in exercising and the effectiveness of the training. Putting the synthesized perspectives of training goals, settings, and requirements for exergames and training components into context, our considerations point to opportunities for improvement in research and rehabilitation, either by adapting existing exergames to patients with mNCDs or by developing novel exergames and exergame-based training concepts specifically tailored to meet patient requirements and needs.


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