改良爵士舞对老年人平衡、认知和情绪的影响。

Patricia T Alpert, Sally K Miller, Harvey Wallmann, Richard Havey, Chad Cross, Theresa Chevalia, Carrie B Gillis, Keshavan Kodandapari
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引用次数: 156

摘要

目的:本初步研究的目的是评估爵士舞课堂教学对13名平均年龄为68岁、健康、居住在社区、说英语的老年妇女的平衡、认知和情绪(特别是抑郁)的影响。数据来源:采用自我报告问卷(Folstein Mini Mental Status Examination [MMSE]和Geriatric Depression Scale [GDS])收集数据,并在三个时间段进行平衡测量的感觉组织测试(SOT)(使用NeuroCom Smart balance Master):时间1:爵士乐课程第1周至第2周之间(基线),时间2:爵士乐课程第8周至第9周之间(中点),时间3:爵士乐课程第15周之后(最终测量)。结论:平均MMSE和GDS评分随时间的差异不显著;SOT分数呈上升趋势(p < 0.001)。使用重复测量方差分析的数据分析显示,在整个研究期间,平衡测量得到改善(F(2,10)= 19.68, p < .001)。使用配对t检验和Bonferroni校正的事后分析表明,从时间1到时间2和从时间2到时间3,平衡性显著增加。这些初步的初步研究结果表明,爵士舞不会影响认知或情绪,但可能会改善老年妇女的平衡。这一发现可能对绝经后人群预防跌倒具有重要意义。实践意义:由于跌倒是男女老年人发病率和死亡率的主要原因,因此需要研究评估爵士舞对老年男性平衡的影响以及爵士舞作为老年人预防跌倒策略的影响。此外,需要更大样本量的纵向研究来测试爵士舞作为一种改善平衡、认知和情绪的策略的有效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The effect of modified jazz dance on balance, cognition, and mood in older adults.

Purpose: The purpose of this pilot study was to evaluate the impact of jazz dance class instruction on balance, cognition, and mood (specifically depression) in 13 healthy, community-dwelling, English-speaking older women with a mean age of 68.

Data sources: Data were collected using self-report questionnaires (Folstein Mini Mental Status Examination [MMSE] and Geriatric Depression Scale [GDS]), and the sensory organization test (SOT) for balance measurements (using the NeuroCom Smart Balance Master) was performed at three time periods in the study: time 1: between week 1 and week 2 of jazz class (baseline), time 2: between week 8 and week 9 of jazz class (midpoint), and time 3: after week 15 of jazz class (final measurement).

Conclusions: Differences in mean MMSE and GDS scores over time were not significant; however, SOT scores showed an increasing trend (p < .001). Data analysis using analysis of variance with repeated measures showed that balance measures improved throughout the duration of the study (F(2,10)= 19.68, p < .001). Post hoc analyses using paired t tests with a Bonferroni correction indicated that significant increases in balance occurred from time 1 to time 2 and from time 2 to time 3. These preliminary pilot study findings suggest that jazz dance does not impact cognition or mood but may improve balance in older women. This finding may have significant implications for fall prevention in the postmenopausal population.

Implications for practice: Because falls are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in older adults of both genders, research is needed to evaluate both the impact of jazz dance on balance in older men and jazz dance as a fall prevention strategy in aging adults. Additionally, longitudinal research with a larger sample size is needed to test the effectiveness of jazz dance as a strategy for improving balance, cognition, and mood.

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