Diehl Manfred, Tseng Han-Yun, Rebok George W, Li Kaigang, Nehrkorn-Bailey Abigail M, Rodriguez Diana, Chen Diefei, Roth David L
Department of Human Development and Family Studies, Colorado State University.
Center on Aging and Health, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University.
Psychol Aging. 2025 Jun;40(4):355-370. doi: 10.1037/pag0000893. Epub 2025 Apr 10.
Following the experimental medicine approach, Diehl et al. (2023) demonstrated the malleability of negative views of aging (NVOA), self-efficacy beliefs, and exercise intention in middle-aged and older adults who participated in the AgingPLUS intervention program. The present study built on those findings and addressed (a) whether the intervention resulted in significant improvements in physical activity (PA) and (b) whether the purported mechanistic variables were significant mediators of the intervention's effects on PA outcomes. AgingPLUS used a randomized, single-blind control group design to implement the intervention in a sample of 335 adults aged 45-75 years. This study reports findings from 278 participants ( = 60.1 years; = 8.3 years) for whom PA measures were available at baseline and the delayed posttest at Week 8. Compared to participants in the Health Education control group and compared to baseline, participants in the AgingPLUS program showed significant improvements in accelerometer-assessed PA (e.g., total daily steps walked; total daily minutes of moderate-to-vigorous PA [MVPA]) and self-reported PA (e.g., weekly kcals burned in MVPA; increase in weekly total minutes of MVPA). Findings from bias-corrected bootstrap mediation analyses yielded partial support for the purported mechanisms of the intervention. Specifically, improvements in NVOA mediated the effects of the intervention on several accelerometer-assessed PA outcomes. Furthermore, improvements in NVOA, general, motivational, and volitional self-efficacy beliefs were significant mediators on several self-reported PA outcomes. Overall, findings provided support for small but significant effects of AgingPLUS on PA outcomes and supportive evidence for several of the theoretical mechanisms tested. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
遵循实验医学方法,迪尔等人(2023年)证明了参与“衰老加”干预项目的中老年人对衰老的负面看法(NVOA)、自我效能信念和运动意愿的可塑性。本研究基于这些发现,探讨了以下两个问题:(a)该干预是否能显著改善身体活动(PA);(b)所谓的机制变量是否是干预对PA结果影响的重要中介因素。“衰老加”采用随机、单盲对照组设计,对335名年龄在45至75岁的成年人进行干预。本研究报告了278名参与者(平均年龄 = 60.1岁;标准差 = 8.3岁)的研究结果,这些参与者在基线和第8周的延迟后测时均有PA测量数据。与健康教育对照组的参与者相比,与基线相比,“衰老加”项目的参与者在加速度计评估的PA(如每日步行总步数;每日中度至剧烈PA [MVPA]的总分钟数)和自我报告的PA(如MVPA中每周燃烧的千卡数;MVPA每周总分钟数的增加)方面有显著改善。偏差校正自助中介分析的结果为该干预的所谓机制提供了部分支持。具体而言,NVOA的改善介导了干预对几个加速度计评估的PA结果的影响。此外,NVOA、一般、动机和意志自我效能信念的改善是几个自我报告的PA结果的重要中介因素。总体而言,研究结果为“衰老加”对PA结果的微小但显著的影响提供了支持,并为所测试的几种理论机制提供了支持性证据。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)