IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q4 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Becca D Jordre, Wendy K Viviers, William Schweinle
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景/目的:临床和研究领域缺乏针对老年运动员的体能筛查措施。本研究旨在定义 "持续运动员体能测试"(Sustained Athlete Fitness Exam,SAFE),这是一种利用美国全国老年运动会运动员的年龄和性别标准数据开发的综合工具,并调查SAFE在年龄、性别、运动或运动量方面的差异:这项横断面研究涉及 4,659 名美国全国老年运动会运动员(年龄 = 67.65,SD = 9.12,59.1% 为女性)。运动员完成了健康史问题和身体表现测量,涉及心血管、肌肉、柔韧性和平衡等分量表。评分采用研究人群的年龄和性别标准。结果按年龄组、性别、运动项目和运动量进行比较:研究对象包括全国老年人运动会的所有 22 个运动项目。健康史显示,慢性病患者比例较低,28.5%的人未报告任何慢性病。每周心血管运动量和阻力运动量的中位数分别为 240 分钟和 30 分钟。在 SAFE 20 分中,得分从 2 分(0.2%)到 20 分(0.8%)不等,中位数为 13 分。SAFE评分在年龄组或性别上的差异极小,在运动项目上的差异也很明显。运动量越大,SAFE 综合得分越高,几乎所有的分量表都呈此趋势:结论:SAFE 和相关标准提供了针对特定人群的比较,这在老年运动员中是前所未有的,该工具能够解决体能的多个领域,同时避免了上限和下限效应。意义/影响:这些研究结果为改善评估、治疗、预防医学以及为日益增长的人口提供训练支持提供了机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Sustained Athlete Fitness Exam-Outcomes of U.S. National Senior Games Athletes.

Background/objectives: Physical fitness screening measures for older athletes are lacking in clinical and research arenas. This study aims to define the Sustained Athlete Fitness Exam (SAFE), a comprehensive tool developed using age and sex-based normative data from U.S. National Senior Games athletes, and to investigate any SAFE differences by age, sex, sport, or exercise volume.

Methods: This cross-sectional study engaged 4,659 U.S. National Senior Games athletes (Mage = 67.65, SD = 9.12, 59.1% female). Athletes completed health history questions and physical performance measures addressing cardiovascular, muscular, flexibility, and balance subscales. Scoring applied age and sex norms from the study population. Outcomes were compared by age group, sex, sport, and exercise volume.

Results: All 22 National Senior Games sports were represented in the study population. Health histories revealed low rates of chronic conditions, with 28.5% reporting none. Median weekly cardiovascular and resistance exercise volumes were 240 and 30 min, respectively. Of the 20 points possible on the SAFE, scores ranged from 2 (0.2%) to 20 (0.8%), with a median of 13. SAFE scoring demonstrated minimal differences by age group or sex and aligned predictably by sport. Higher exercise volumes were associated with superior SAFE composite scores, with nearly all subscales following this trend.

Conclusion: The SAFE and associated norms offer population-specific comparisons previously unavailable for older athletes, with a tool able to address multiple domains of physical fitness while avoiding ceiling and floor effects. Significance/Implications: These findings provide the opportunity to improve assessment, treatment, preventative medicine, and training support for a growing demographic.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
6.70%
发文量
105
审稿时长
>12 weeks
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.
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