Department of Human Development, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA 24060, USA.
J Altern Complement Med. 2012 Mar;18(3):281-6. doi: 10.1089/acm.2011.0008.
The purpose of this study is to examine and compare health status across ages using a volunteer sample of U.S. Taijiquan and Qigong (TQG) practitioners (N=120; age range=24-83, M=54.77) and a nationally representative sample (N=414,629; age range=18-99, M=54.86) collected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The study design was cross-sectional, between-group comparisons.
An online survey designed to collect data on health-related quality of life (HRQoL), lifestyle variables, and TQG practice regimens was administered to a volunteer sample of taijiquan practitioners. A link to the survey was e-mailed to registrants of the International T'ai Chi Symposium who further forwarded (snowballed) the link to other practitioners across the country and around the world. The HRQoL and demographic sections of the survey were adapted from the CDC's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). Taiji practitioner data and BRFSS data were then merged and three groups--No Exercise, Some Exercise, and TQG Exercise--were created for the analysis. Health status was regressed on age, exercise group membership, and the interaction between age and group membership while controlling for income and education.
After controlling for the effects of income and education, a significant interaction effect (p<0.001) was detected between age and group membership. Group membership was not a substantial predictor of health among younger individuals, but among older adults, substantive and significant between-group differences appeared, with the TQG group evincing the best average health trajectory across ages.
Although this cross-sectional comparison cannot establish causality or rule out cohort effects, the extraordinary trajectory of health status among TQG practitioners in this U.S. sample is significantly better than average exercising and nonexercising U.S. Americans, even while controlling for the influence of income and education levels. Lifespan developmental theory is utilized to consider several factors beyond the physical exercise value of TQG that may be responsible for the exercise group differences.
本研究旨在通过美国太极拳和气功(TQG)练习者的志愿者样本(N=120;年龄范围=24-83,M=54.77)和疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)收集的具有全国代表性的样本(N=414629;年龄范围=18-99,M=54.86),检查和比较不同年龄段的健康状况。
研究设计为横断面、组间比较。
一项旨在收集与健康相关的生活质量(HRQoL)、生活方式变量和 TQG 练习方案数据的在线调查被用于太极拳练习者的志愿者样本。向国际太极拳研讨会的注册者发送了调查的链接,他们进一步将链接转发(滚雪球)给全国各地和世界各地的其他从业者。调查的 HRQoL 和人口统计学部分改编自疾病预防控制中心的行为风险因素监测系统(BRFSS)。然后将太极拳练习者的数据和 BRFSS 数据合并,并创建了三个组——无运动、有些运动和 TQG 运动——进行分析。在控制收入和教育的情况下,将健康状况回归到年龄、运动组归属和年龄与组归属之间的交互作用上。
在控制收入和教育的影响后,年龄和组归属之间检测到显著的交互作用(p<0.001)。在年轻个体中,组归属并不是健康的重要预测因素,但在老年个体中,出现了实质性和显著的组间差异,TQG 组在所有年龄段的健康轨迹表现最佳。
尽管这种横断面比较不能确定因果关系或排除队列效应,但在美国样本中,TQG 练习者的健康状况轨迹非常出色,明显优于普通锻炼和不锻炼的美国成年人,即使在控制收入和教育水平的影响下也是如此。生命周期发展理论被用于考虑 TQG 的物理锻炼价值之外的几个可能导致运动组差异的因素。