Physical Therapy Division, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Duke University, Durham, NC 27710, United States of America.
Durham VA Health Care System, Health Services Research and Development, United States of America; Department of Medicine & Thurston Arthritis, United States of America.
Exp Gerontol. 2018 Oct 2;112:9-19. doi: 10.1016/j.exger.2018.08.002. Epub 2018 Aug 10.
Physical activity provides substantial health benefits. Older adults are less physically active than the rest of the population, and interventions that promote physical activity are needed. In this meta-analysis, we investigate how different wearable activity trackers (pedometers and accelerometers) may impact physical activity levels in older adults.
We searched MEDLINE, Embase and CINAHL for randomized controlled trials including participants that were ≥65 years, using wearable activity trackers with the intent of increasing physical activity. Studies whose comparator groups were engaged in active or inactive interventions, such as continued a physical therapy program or goal-setting counseling, were not excluded simply for implementing co-interventions. We used random-effects models to produce standardized mean differences (SMDs) for physical activity outcomes. Heterogeneity was measured using I.
Nine studies met the eligibility criteria: Four using accelerometers, four using pedometers, and one comparing accelerometers and pedometers, for a total number of 939 participants. Using pooled data, we found a statistically significant effect of using accelerometers (SMD = 0.43 (95%CI 0.19-0.68), I = 1.6%, p = 0.298), but not by using pedometers (SMD = 0.17 (95%CI -0.08-0.43), I = 37.7%, p = 0.174) for increasing physical activity levels.
In this study, we found that accelerometers, alone or in combination with other co-interventions, increased physical activity in older adults however pedometers were not found to increase physical activity. The high risk of bias found in most studies limits these findings. High quality studies that isolate the effects of accelerometers on physical activity changes are needed.
体育活动对健康有很大益处。老年人的体育活动量低于其他人群,因此需要采取干预措施来促进他们增加体育活动量。本荟萃分析旨在研究不同的可穿戴活动追踪器(计步器和加速度计)对老年人体育活动水平的影响。
我们检索了 MEDLINE、Embase 和 CINAHL,纳入了≥65 岁、使用可穿戴活动追踪器以增加体育活动量的随机对照试验。比较组参与积极或不积极干预的研究,例如继续进行物理治疗计划或设定目标咨询,不会仅仅因为实施了联合干预而被排除在外。我们使用随机效应模型生成体育活动结果的标准化均数差值(SMD)。使用 I² 测量异质性。
有 9 项研究符合入选标准:4 项使用加速度计,4 项使用计步器,1 项比较加速度计和计步器,共有 939 名参与者。使用汇总数据,我们发现使用加速度计对增加体育活动水平有统计学上显著的效果(SMD=0.43(95%CI 0.19-0.68),I²=1.6%,p=0.298),但使用计步器则没有(SMD=0.17(95%CI -0.08-0.43),I²=37.7%,p=0.174)。
本研究发现,单独使用或与其他联合干预措施结合使用的加速度计可增加老年人的体育活动量,但计步器并未增加老年人的体育活动量。大多数研究的高偏倚风险限制了这些发现。需要开展高质量的研究,以确定加速度计对体育活动变化的影响。