Against this background, the current infection control measures have paradoxical implications. On the one hand, lockdown measures contribute to the protection of vulnerable populations in particular. On the other hand, the inevitable result of these measures is that those being protected become not only socially isolated and subject to enormous psychological strain, but also decline physically due to prolonged sedentariness [6].
The lockdown setting reduces physical activity in several ways. Firstly, residents are restricted from leaving facilities during local COVID-19 outbreaks. Secondly, visitors – significant motivators for physical activity – are no longer permitted access. Thirdly, caregivers have less time for the residents’ physical activation due to the additional workloads caused by COVID-19. Fourthly, group activities offered by qualified external trainers and providers are either completely discontinued or held by less qualified internal staff and conducted for a shorter duration with reduced numbers of participants – if at all [7].
From this perspective, the limited mobility and restricted social interactions of vulnerable groups in long-term care facilities come with a high price: while weeks of isolation and reduced interactions with visitors could potentially save lives, the lockdown endangers health and potentially increases the risk of mortality in equal measure.
Given that physical activity promotion in long-term care facilities tends not to be structurally embedded with respect to staffing and fixed time slots, there is no substitution for the consequential lack of activating stakeholders [7]. The lockdown thus highlights two main problems with regard to the overall goal of active and healthy ageing in long-term care facilities:
(1) Long-term care facilities are designed to provide protection for the vulnerable but not to empower residents and promote self-determination and autonomy of the residents. The severe lockdown situation reinforces passive-oriented care rather than activating and recognizing residents as experts of their own well-being.
(2) Although physical activity is essential for promoting health and preventing increasing care needs, most long-term care facilities depend on external service providers and visitors to promote physical activity. If these resources are no longer available, activity also comes to a halt.