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Pilot
program helps boost Seniors’ activity
levels, quality of life
Newswise — Older adults often carry a deeply
ingrained belief that inactive, sedentary
lives are an inevitable part of aging. But
this mindset is not just wrong, it can be
changed — with positive physical and mental
health results.
In a new UCLA study, researchers show that
older adults who participated in a pilot
test for a program aimed at changing this
mindset became more physically active,
increasing their walking levels by about 24
percent — an average increase of 2.5 miles
per week. The study is available on the Web
site of the Journal of the American
Geriatrics Society.
"We can teach older adults to get rid of
those old beliefs that becoming sedentary is
just a normal part of growing older," said
Dr. Catherine Sarkisian, assistant professor
of geriatrics at the David Geffen School of
Medicine at UCLA and the study's lead
author. "We can teach them that they can and
should remain physically active at all
ages."
The researchers used a technique known as
"attribution retraining" to effect a change
among study participants about what it means
to age and what to expect out of it.
"The exciting part is that, to our
knowledge, this attribution retraining
component hasn't been tested in a physical
activity intervention," Sarkisian said.
"It's been very successful in educational
interventions."
The researchers worked with 46 sedentary
adults age 65 and older from three senior
centers in the Los Angeles area. The
participants attended four weekly, hour-long
group sessions led by a trained health
educator who applied an attribution
retraining curriculum. The participants were
taught to reject the notion that becoming
older means becoming sedentary and to accept
that they can continue engaging in physical
activity well into old age. Each attribution
retraining session was followed by a
one-hour exercise class that included
strength, endurance and flexibility
training.
Participants were fitted with electronic
pedometers, to be worn at all times, which
measured the number of steps they took each
week. They also completed surveys that
gauged their expectations about aging —
higher scores indicated that participants
expected high functioning with aging, while
lower scores meant they expected physical
and mental decline.
As a result of the program, participants
increased the number of steps they took per
week from a mean of 24,749 to 30,707 — a 24
percent increase — and their scores on the
age-expectation survey rose by 30 percent.
Also, their mental health-related quality of
life improved, and they reported fewer
difficulties with daily activities,
experienced less pain, had higher energy
levels and slept better.
"An intervention combining attribution
retraining with a weekly exercise class
raised walking levels and improved quality
of life in sedentary older adults in this
small pre-post community-based pilot study,"
the researchers wrote. "Attribution
retraining deserves further investigation as
a potential means of increasing physical
activity in sedentary older adults."
For the full text of the study, visit
www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1532-5415.2007.01427.x.
Other co-authors were Bernard Weiner of the
UCLA Department of Psychology, Thomas R.
Prohaska of the department of community
health sciences at the University of
Illinois at Chicago's School of Public
Health, and Connie Davis of the Fraser
Health Authority in Abbotsford, British
Columbia.
The study was supported by grants from the
National Institute on Aging (NIA) through
the UCLA Older Americans Independence Center
and the UCLA Mentored Clinical Scientist
Program in Geriatrics, and an NIA Paul B.
Beeson Career Development Award in Aging.
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