| Literature DB >> 27293891 |
Chantrell Antoine Parker1, Rebecca Ellis1.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine if electronic messaging would increase min of aerobic physical activity (PA) among older adults. Participants were active older adults (n = 28; M age = 60 years, SD = 5.99, and range = 51-74 years). Using an incomplete within-subjects crossover design, participants were randomly assigned to begin the 4-week study receiving the treatment condition (a morning and evening text message) or the control condition (an evening text message). Participants self-reported min of completed aerobic PA by cell phone text. The 1-way within-subjects ANOVA showed significant group differences (p < 0.05). Specifically, when participants were in the treatment condition, they reported significantly greater average weekly min of aerobic PA (M = 96.88 min, SD = 62.9) compared to when they completed the control condition (M = 71.68 min, SD = 40.98). Electronic messaging delivered via cell phones was effective at increasing min of aerobic PA among older adults.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27293891 PMCID: PMC4886103 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6171028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Aging Res ISSN: 2090-2204
Demographics for Group 1 and Group 2 participants.
| Characteristic | Group 1 | Group 2 | Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ( | ||||
| M (SD) | M (SD) | M (SD) | ||||
| Age | 58.23 (6.59) | 61.60 (5.15) | 60.04 (5.99) | |||
| Gender | ||||||
| Male |
| 15.4% |
| 20.0% |
| 17.9% |
| Female |
| 84.6% |
| 80.0% |
| 82.1% |
| Marital status | ||||||
| Married |
| 53.8% |
| 86.7% |
| 71.4% |
| Other |
| 46.2% |
| 13.3% |
| 28.6% |
| Race | ||||||
| White |
| 92.3% |
| 100% |
| 96.4% |
| Other |
| 7.7% |
| 3.6% | ||
| Education level | ||||||
| High school or less |
| 15.4% |
| 6.7% |
| 3.6% |
| Some college or associate's degree |
| 84.6% |
| 26.7% |
| 21.4% |
| Bachelor's degree or more |
| 66.7% |
| 75.0% | ||
| Income level | ||||||
| $25,000 or more annually |
| 92.3% |
| 66.7% |
| 78.6% |
| Did not report |
| 7.7% |
| 33.3% |
| 21.4% |
| History of disease | ||||||
| Cardiovascular |
| 23.1% |
| 13.3% |
| 17.9% |
| Cancer |
| 0.0% |
| 20.0% |
| 10.7% |
| Thyroid |
| 0.0% |
| 20.0% |
| 10.7% |
| Bone |
| 7.7% |
| 6.7% |
| 7.1% |
| Spine |
| 15.4% |
| 0.0% |
| 7.1% |
| Other |
| 23.1% |
| 13.3% |
| 17.9% |
| No disease reported |
| 46.2% |
| 33.3% |
| 39.3% |
Note. Group 1 = treatment condition first. Group 2 = control condition first. Frequencies may not equal total sample sizes or 100% because 3 participants reported 2 illnesses.
Weekly min of aerobic physical activity for Group 1 and Group 2 participants.
| Categories | 0–29 min | 30–59 min | 60–89 min | 90–119 min | 120–149 min | ≥150 min | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | ||||||||||||
| Group 1 (TX) |
| 15.4% |
| 23.1% |
| 7.7% |
| 7.7% |
| 30.8% |
| 15.4% |
| Group 2 |
| 6.7% |
| 33.3% |
| 20.0% |
| 20.0% |
| 6.7% |
| 13.3% |
| Week 2 | ||||||||||||
| Group 1 (TX) |
| 15.4% |
| 15.4% |
| 15.4% |
| 15.4% |
| 7.7% |
| 30.8% |
| Group 2 |
| 26.7% |
| 6.7% |
| 20.0% |
| 13.3% |
| 26.7% |
| 6.7% |
| Week 3 | ||||||||||||
| Group 1 |
| 15.4% |
| 23.1% |
| 15.4% |
| 46.2% |
| 0.0% |
| 0.0% |
| Group 2 (TX) |
| 33.3% |
| 6.7% |
| 20.0% |
| 0.0% |
| 20.0% |
| 20.0% |
| Week 4 | ||||||||||||
| Group 1 |
| 23.1% |
| 30.8% |
| 23.1% |
| 7.7% |
| 7.7% |
| 7.7% |
| Group 2 (TX) |
| 6.7% |
| 20.0% |
| 6.7% |
| 6.7% |
| 46.7% |
| 13.3% |
Note. TX = treatment condition. Group 1 (n = 13) = treatment condition first. Group 2 (n = 15) = control condition first.
Figure 1Average weekly min of aerobic physical activity. TX = treatment condition. CON = control condition.
Figure 2Barriers to aerobic physical activity. TX = treatment condition. CON = control condition.