| Literature DB >> 23819885 |
Alexandre Mouton1, Marc Cloes.
Abstract
Regular physical activity is associated with a wide range of health benefits. As population age, promotion of physical activity should specifically target older adults, an expanding group involving potential higher health care costs in the near future. Innovative interventions focusing on physical activity behaviors of senior adults exposed promising results, most recently through the use of the Internet. If seniors and Internet are generally considered as two opposite concepts, arguments in favour of bringing them together in a public health perspective have been identified by the recent literature. Older adults are the fastest growing group of Internet users and are more prone than younger to use it for health-related subjects. Web-based interventions are effective in many health promotion sectors, including physical activity. This is particularly true when interventions target the environmental determinants of each senior citizen and are specifically designed for this population. Those early research findings must clearly be extended, particularly regarding to the long term effects of Web-based physical activity interventions. Solutions that will reduce the high dropout rate recorded in the existing literature must also be considered as a priority in order to ensure the development of this forward-looking field of research.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23819885 PMCID: PMC3723485 DOI: 10.1186/0778-7367-71-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Public Health ISSN: 0778-7367
Swot analysis of the web-based interventions to promote physical activity by older adults
| Evidence for a short term effectiveness | Large amount of senior Internet non-users |
| Environmentally tailored interventions | Lack of social/interactive elements |
| Cost-effective interventions | High dropout rates |
| Seniors’ concerns about their health | Self-reported measures to assess PA |
| Create more “senior-friendly” Websites | Uncertain long-term effectiveness |
| Combine with social/cultural/gaming elements | Fail to reach seniors with low motivation for PA |
| Standardize theorically-driven Websites | Rise of the digital divide |
| Use objective measures to assess PA |