bogeyandruby

Random stuff, reflections on the meaning of life and death, humour, self-deprecation, a bit of bad poetry.

I had a new client this morning with a history of falls. His wife’s goal was for him to participate in an exercise program facilitated by me. Unfortunately, the client had zero interest in this. He also pshawed all the fall prevention recommendations I gave him including switching out his pantoufles de grand-mère, aka an accident waiting to happen, for a closed shoe, anti-slip model. I spent about fifteen minutes at the end of the visit trying to negotiate a compromise between them as they bickered back and forth. Initially he insisted I come to see him after my work hours, when it was convenient for him. I refused. More bickering ensued and we finally settled on two to three half hour sessions during his lunch hour. This was more about appeasing his wife than helping a client who doesn’t want to be helped.

In the forty years I have worked as a physiotherapist, I have never been able to motivate someone to exercise. That isn’t to say I haven’t had clients who were motivated from the get-go, able to formulate realistic (and sometimes unrealistic) objectives, short and long term goals. I have dream clients who follow recommendations and exercise programs religiously and I have other clients who only exercise their right of refusal.

In a public system, there is a need to be efficient and productive. Access to our service is universal which means we are spread thinly with everyone getting a little piece of the pie. Turnover is essential and as such, we do not have the luxury or time to convince people to exercise.

There are numerous studies that link aging well to exercise and I tout them plenty. The problem is that many of these clients are beyond that point, grappling with comorbidities, progressive diseases and/or cognitive decline. An exercise program won’t work if the client doesn’t remember to do it. And someone who has been sedentary all their life is not likely to comply either.

There are some strategies. Group classes that incorporate socialization as well as exercise are great for people who won’t exercise on their own. Seniors residences offer these as do most municipalities at very reasonable fees. Then there is the notion of functional activities to incorporate exercise. For example, walking to the bathroom, to the kitchen for a meal, or to check your mailbox counts as exercise. Combining an activity they enjoy such as shopping or a meal out works on exercise tolerance. Some of my clients even start with a Costco trip, a shopper’s marathon (and my personal nightmare). Shopping carts can act as a walker, by the way.

If the client is already able to independently transfer out of a chair, off a toilet, in and out of bed, walk a functional distance, go up and down stairs and manage an outing, is pushing an unwanted exercise program really necessary? Probably not, especially if there is resistance to more.

Quality of life is choice and sometimes saying no is the last bit of control they have. It is important to respect that choice as a professional and as a caregiver, as frustrating as that may be.

Tai chi is fabulous for balance.

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Please note that the role of the community home care physiotherapist is much more than convincing people to do their exercise program. Also, a physiotherapist must be able to keep up with their clientele and as such take their own advice and exercise regularly.

3 thoughts on “December 16 — The Myth of Motivation

  1. Kiki's avatar Kiki says:

    Oh, you are so right about all of this. My best loved sentence was:
    I have other clients who only exercise their right of refusal……
    I know quite a few of those too.
    Also, I must confess that I am one of those who only can exercise in a group. So that it becomes more of a social event (coffee after is fine but not mandatory). I’m just too plain lazy to do anything sporty on my own. Knowing this, I am a regular member of a weekly nordic walking group, where numbers vary from 6 to 25 depending on weather, illnesses, and a ton of other reasons – I won’t go in rain (frizzy hair) for instance. Then during the winter months (late October to mid April) I join aquafit class, once a week, and on Wednesdays I join a gym class for 60+ – and I’m definitely, w/o the shadow of a doubt, the weakest link! But hey ho, who cares, I’m doing something. I do my shopping on foot as far as possible, I walk everywhere, climb stairs and just move. BUT one needs to be aware of the consequences of everything we do or don’t do. Great post.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. bogeyandruby's avatar bogeyandruby says:

      Kiki, straight from the physio’s mouth: you are doing great and will very likely age well! You know yourself and have found ways to exercise that fit your lifestyle and temperament. I say, brava! 🙌

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Kiki's avatar Kiki says:

        thank you so much; i‘m just really very, very lucky that I never take myself seriously. In that respect, I‘m very british; don‘t mind make a fool of yourself!

        Liked by 1 person

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