Juggling with theory, evidence, practice, and real-world circumstances: Development of a complex community intervention to increase physical activity in inactive adults aged 50 years and older – The Move for Life Study
Despite well-known benefits of physical activity, in Ireland only 38 % of older adults are sufficiently active.
Behavioural interventions are rarely developed systematically and, when reported, inadequate description often
becomes a barrier for subsequent replication and scalability. In this article, we describe the development and
characteristics of Move for Life, an intervention to reach and help inactive adults aged 50 years and older in crease their physical activity. It was designed to fit within existing group-based structured physical activity
programmes run by Local Sports Partnerships, thus maximising the likelihood of translation into policy and
practice. Constructs from social cognitive theory, self-determination theory, and the conceptual model of group
cohesion in exercise informed the conceptual model and the development of behavioural skills, social support,
and group cohesion intervention strategies. Physical activity instructors supported by peer mentors, who also
contributed to sustaining the intervention, implemented these strategies. Moving away from accounts of inter vention development as a relatively simple linear process, we illustrate the complex interplay of theory, evi dence, practice, and real-world contextual circumstances that shaped the development of Move for Life. Against
this backdrop, we discuss issues relevant to the planning and reporting of behavioural and physical activity
interventions in public health.
Funding
Organisation, expression and diversity of the sub-telomeric regions of the ancient eukaryote, Giardia duodenalis