Kaplan M S, Newsom J T, McFarland B H, Lu L
School of Community Health, Portland State University, Portland, Oregon 97207, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2001 Nov;21(4):306-12. doi: 10.1016/s0749-3797(01)00364-6.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization, increasing physical activity may help prolong health and preserve the quality of life in late adulthood. Physical activity has taken center stage as the behavior most likely to alter health. However, there is little recent population-wide information about the demographic and psychosocial correlates of physical activity in the elderly population. The purpose of the study was to identify the factors associated with older adults' frequency of physical activity. The study may have implications for preventive interventions.
Data for 12,611 community-dwelling people aged > or = 65 from the 1996-1997 Canadian National Population Health Survey were examined. Predictors of frequent versus infrequent self-reported physical activity lasting > 15 minutes were examined using logistic regression analyses. The predictor variables included geographic location, psychological distress (Generalized Distress Scale), demographic factors (age, gender, educational level, and marital status), perceived social support, chronic medical conditions, physical limitations due to injury, functional limitations, smoking behavior, and body mass index (BMI).
Gender (male); younger age; higher levels of education; being unmarried; absence of chronic conditions, injuries, and functional limitations; lower BMI; social support (females); nonsmoking; region; and lower levels of psychological distress were associated with frequent physical activity in late life. Older adults in western Canadian provinces were more active than those in eastern provinces.
The results will be useful for the design of interventions aimed at improving older adults' health behavior and other health and functional outcomes, especially for subgroups in particular need. Recommendations for further longitudinal research are presented.
根据美国疾病控制与预防中心以及世界卫生组织的说法,增加身体活动可能有助于延长健康寿命并维持晚年生活质量。身体活动已成为最有可能改变健康状况的行为而备受关注。然而,近期几乎没有关于老年人群体身体活动的人口统计学和社会心理相关因素的全人群信息。本研究的目的是确定与老年人身体活动频率相关的因素。该研究可能对预防性干预措施具有启示意义。
对1996 - 1997年加拿大全国人口健康调查中12611名年龄≥65岁的社区居民的数据进行了分析。使用逻辑回归分析检验自我报告的持续超过15分钟的频繁与不频繁身体活动的预测因素。预测变量包括地理位置、心理困扰(综合困扰量表)、人口统计学因素(年龄、性别、教育水平和婚姻状况)、感知到的社会支持、慢性疾病、因伤导致的身体限制、功能限制、吸烟行为以及体重指数(BMI)。
性别(男性)、年龄较小、教育水平较高、未婚、无慢性疾病、损伤和功能限制、BMI较低、社会支持(女性)、不吸烟、地区以及心理困扰水平较低与晚年频繁身体活动相关。加拿大西部省份的老年人比东部省份的老年人更活跃。
这些结果将有助于设计旨在改善老年人健康行为以及其他健康和功能结局的干预措施,特别是针对有特殊需求的亚组人群。本文还提出了进一步进行纵向研究的建议。