Laura E Finch, Sylvia C Brown, Corliss Taylor, Benjamin Mendez, Samantha M Sawicki, Alan Gonzolez, M Lucia Madariaga, Daniel S Rubin, Nabiel A Mir, Lauren J Gleason, Margaret K Danilovich, David E Conroy, Megan J Huisingh-Scheetz
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Exercise is the most effective frailty mitigation intervention studied to date, yet frail older adults may face unique hurdles to exercise behavior change.
Objective: Our objective was to compare perceived opportunities and motivation for physical activity among subgroups with varying physical capability to inform frailty intervention development.
Methods: We analyzed cross-sectional survey data from n = 101 community-dwelling, older adults (n = 30 nonfrail, n = 59 prefrail, n = 12 frail; 93% African-American). Measures were organized by the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation-Behavior change framework. The capability factor included the frailty phenotype (nonfrail, prefrail, or frail). "Opportunity" factors included: barrier and resource identification, local program awareness, the Exercise Barriers Subscale, and exercise preferences. "Motivation" factors, included the Self-Rated Abilities for Health Practices Exercise Subscale; perceived exercise need, benefits, and harms; the Outcome Expectations for Exercise Scale; and personal health goals. Kruskal-Wallis and chi-square tests identified between-group quantitative differences. Open-ended survey responses were evaluated qualitatively for themes.
Results: Frail adults had worse Exercise Barriers Subscale scores (p = .005); reported more barriers and fewer resources; were less aware of local exercise facilities; and had a narrower scope of exercise preferences. Frail adults also had worse Self-Rated Abilities for Health Practices Exercise Subscale scores (p = .004); were more likely to indicate they needed exercise; perceived more psychological exercise benefits than physical; but had worse Outcome Expectations for Exercise Scale scores (p < .001). One-year health goal themes were similar among frailty groups, with the majority identifying functional goals. Conclusion and Significance/Implications: This study identified opportunity and motivation factors unique to frail adults that could inform behavior change discussions and interventions in frail adults.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Aging and Physical Activity (JAPA) is a multidisciplinary journal that publishes peer-reviewed original research reports, scholarly reviews, and professional-application articles on the relationship between physical activity and the aging process. The journal encourages the submission of articles that can contribute to an understanding of (a) the impact of physical activity on physiological, psychological, and social aspects of older adults and (b) the effect of advancing age or the aging process on physical activity among older adults.
In addition to publishing research reports and reviews, JAPA publishes articles that examine the development, implementation, and evaluation of physical activity programs among older adults. Articles from the biological, behavioral, and social sciences, as well as from fields such as medicine, clinical psychology, physical and recreational therapy, health, physical education, and recreation, are appropriate for the journal. Studies using animal models do not fit within our mission statement and should be submitted elsewhere.