Sarkisian Catherine A, Prohaska Thomas R, Davis Connie, Weiner Bernard
Division of Geriatrics, Department of Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2007 Nov;55(11):1842-6. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2007.01427.x.
To pilot test a new behavioral intervention to increase walking in sedentary older adults.
Pre-post community-based pilot study.
Three senior centers in greater Los Angeles.
Forty-six sedentary adults aged 65 and older.
At four weekly 1-hour group sessions held at the senior centers, a trained health educator applied a theoretically grounded, standardized "attribution retraining" curriculum developed by a multidisciplinary team of investigators. Participants were taught that becoming sedentary is not inevitable with aging and that older adults should attribute being sedentary to modifiable attributes rather than to old age. A 1-hour exercise class including strength, endurance, and flexibility training followed each weekly attribution retraining session.
Change from baseline in steps per week recorded using a digital pedometer was measured after 7 weeks. Age expectations (measured using the Expectations Regarding Aging-38 survey, a previously tested instrument on which higher scores indicate that the participant expects high functioning with aging and lower scores indicate that the participant expects physical and mental decline) and health-related quality of life were measured using in-person interviews.
Mean steps per week increased from 24,749 to 30,707, a 24% increase-equivalent to 2.5 miles (2-sided t-test P=.002). Age expectation scores increased 30% (P<.001), and the changes in age expectations and steps per week correlated (correlation coefficient=0.39, P=.01). Participants experienced improved mental health-related quality of life (P=.049) and reported less difficulty with activities of daily living (P=.04). More than 50% of participants reported improvements in pain, energy level, and sleep quality.
In this small pre-post community-based pilot study, a structured attribution retraining curriculum accompanied by a weekly exercise class was associated with increased walking levels and improved quality of life in sedentary older adults. Attribution retraining deserves further investigation as a potential means of increasing physical activity in sedentary older adults.
对一种旨在增加久坐不动的老年人步行量的新型行为干预措施进行试点测试。
基于社区的前后对照试点研究。
大洛杉矶地区的三个老年中心。
46名65岁及以上久坐不动的成年人。
在老年中心每周举行一次、每次时长1小时的4次小组会议上,一名经过培训的健康教育工作者采用了由多学科研究团队制定的、基于理论的标准化“归因再训练”课程。参与者们学到,久坐不动并非衰老过程中不可避免的现象,老年人应将久坐归因于可改变的因素而非年龄。每周的归因再训练课程之后都会安排一节1小时的运动课,包括力量、耐力和柔韧性训练。
7周后,使用数字计步器测量每周步数相对于基线的变化。使用面对面访谈的方式测量年龄期望(使用“关于衰老的期望-38调查”进行测量,这是一种之前经过测试的工具,得分越高表明参与者期望随着年龄增长保持较高的功能水平,得分越低表明参与者期望身体和心理出现衰退)以及与健康相关的生活质量。
每周平均步数从24749步增加到30707步,增加了24%,相当于2.5英里(双侧t检验P = 0.002)。年龄期望得分提高了30%(P < 0.001),年龄期望的变化与每周步数相关(相关系数 = 0.39,P = 0.01)。参与者的心理健康相关生活质量得到改善(P = 0.049),并且报告在日常生活活动中遇到的困难减少(P = 0.04)。超过50%的参与者报告疼痛、精力水平和睡眠质量有所改善。
在这项小型的基于社区的前后对照试点研究中,结构化的归因再训练课程加上每周一次的运动课,与久坐不动的老年人步行量增加以及生活质量改善相关。归因再训练作为一种增加久坐不动的老年人身体活动的潜在方法,值得进一步研究。