| Literature DB >> 27575534 |
Dafna Merom1, Erin Mathieu2, Ester Cerin3, Rachael L Morton4, Judy M Simpson2, Chris Rissel2, Kaarin J Anstey5, Catherine Sherrington6, Stephen R Lord7, Robert G Cumming2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The prevention of falls among older people is a major public health challenge. Exercises that challenge balance are recognized as an efficacious fall prevention strategy. Given that small-scale trials have indicated that diverse dance styles can improve balance and gait of older adults, two of the strongest risk factors for falls in older people, this study aimed to determine whether social dance is effective in i) reducing the number of falls and ii) improving physical and cognitive fall-related risk factors. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27575534 PMCID: PMC5004860 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Fig 1Cluster allocation and participant flow by study arm.
*MMSE indicates Mini-Mental State Examination.
Intervention (dance) and wait-listed (control) villages (clusters) by cluster size baseline and follow-up number of participants and adherence to dance sessions.
| Dance villages | Control villages | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Village No. | Pop. | Baseline cluster size | Study-end retention | Attendance | Village No. | Pop. | Baseline cluster size | Study-end retention, |
| 3 | 85 | 21 (25) | 15 (71) | 53 | 1 | 110 | 14 (13) | 13 (93) |
| 6 | 114 | 14 (12) | 9 (64) | 57 | 2 | 96 | 19 (20) | 12 (63) |
| 7 | 350 | 43 (12) | 35 (81) | 51 | 4 | 240 | 27 (11) | 19 (70) |
| 8 | 140 | 18 (13) | 16 (89) | 49 | 5 | 300 | 33 (11) | 29 (88) |
| 9 | 250 | 22 (9) | 18 (82) | 49 | 11 | 127 | 22 (17) | 20 (92) |
| 10 | 120 | 13 (11) | 10 (77) | 59 | 12 | 350 | 26 (7) | 18 (69) |
| 14 | 133 | 25 (19) | 16 (64) | 54 | 13 | 113 | 38 (34) | 36 (95) |
| 15 | 276 | 25 (9) | 15 (60) | 38 | 16 | 300 | 22 (7) | 18 (82) |
| 17 | 164 | 26 (16) | 20 (77) | 48 | 18 | 180 | 13 (7) | 11 (77) |
| 20 | 300 | 32 (11) | 28 (88) | 55 | 19 | 175 | 20 (11) | 17 (85) |
| 21 | 210 | 25 (12) | 23 (92) | 62 | 22 | 150 | 17 (11) | 14 (86) |
| 23 | 135 | 15 (11) | 12 (80) | 61 | - | - | - | - |
| Total | 2,277 | 279 (12) | 217 (78) | 51 | 2,141 | 251 (12) | 207 (82) | |
a = Population size
b = attendance was calculated as proportion of classes attended from total number of classes delivered, between 79 to 80 classes depending on the village
c = village received folk dancing
d = mean attendance
Characteristics of study participants at baseline by group.
| Dance | Control | Total Sample | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Age >80 years | 119 | (43) | 89 | (35) | 208 | (39) |
| Female sex | 231 | (83) | 217 | (86) | 448 | (85) |
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| Australia | 193 | (69) | 193) | (77) | 386 | (73) |
| English-speaking | 52 | (19) | 40 | (16) | 92 | (17) |
| Non-English speaking | 34 | (12) | 18 | (7) | 52 | (10) |
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| Year 10 or below | 88 | (31) | 103 | (41) | 191 | (36) |
| Completed High school/Technical And Future Education (TAFE) | 146 | (52) | 127 | (51) | 273 | (51) |
| University degree | 45 | (16) | 21) | (8) | 66 | (12) |
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| Yes | 175 | (63) | 142 | (57) | 317 | (60) |
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| 0 falls | 202 | (73) | 180 | (72) | 382 | (72) |
| 1 fall | 48 | (17) | 45 | (18) | 93 | (18) |
| ≥2 falls (“multiple fallers”) | 27 | (10) | 26 | (10) | 53 | (10) |
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| ≥2 chronic conditions | 190 | (68) | 180 | (72) | 377 | (71) |
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| Stroke | 28 | (10) | 16 | (6) | 44 | (8) |
| Parkinson Disease | 3 | (1) | 2 | (1) | 5 | (1) |
| Arthritis | 154 | (55) | 151 | (60) | 305 | (58) |
| Diabetes | 34 | (12) | 24 | (10) | 58 | (11) |
| Depression symptoms (GDS | 43 | (15) | 35 | (14) | 78 | (15) |
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| 12 | (4) | 5 | (2) | 17 | (3) |
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| >5 medications | 117 | (42) | 95 | (38) | 212 | (40) |
| Psychoactive medications | 17 | (6) | 12 | (5) | 29 | (5) |
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| No risk | 80 | (29) | 83 | (33) | 163 | (31) |
| Low | 88 | (31) | 104 | (41) | 192 | (36) |
| Mild | 64 | (23) | 43 | (17) | 107 | (20) |
| Moderate to High | 47 | (17) | 21 | (8) | 68 | (13) |
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| 28–30 | 183 | (65) | 188 | (75) | 371 | (70) |
| <27 | 96 | (34) | 63 | (25) | 159 | (30) |
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| ≥3.0 h/wk of planned exercise | 164 | (60) | 150 | (60) | 314 | (59) |
| ≥14.0 h/wk of physical activity | 230 | (83) | 211 | (84) | 441 | (83) |
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| Currently dancing | 23 | (8) | 9 | (4) | 32 | (6) |
| Never danced | 72 | (26) | 74 | (29) | 146 | (28) |
a = TAFE is a vocational college in Australia
b = GDS = Geriatric Depression Score
c = Edge contrast sensitivity is part of the Physiological Performance Assessments (PPA) tests
d = Physiological Performance Assessment risk profile was calculated from participants’ PPA z-score compared to age-specific population norms
e = MMSE = Mini Mental State Examination
Number of falls and incidence of falling among study groups and by baseline falls history.
| Dance ( | Control ( | Unadjusted | Adjusted | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Falls (rate | Falls (rate) | IRR | IRR | |
| All study participants ( | 257 (1.03) | 187 (0.80) | 1.34 (0.98–1.83) | 1.19 (0.83–1.71) |
| Falls in the past 12 mo | ||||
| No fall ( | 142 (0.78) | 103 (0.61) | 1.35 (0.83–2.21) | 1.19 (0.67–2.10) |
| 1 fall ( | 34 (0.81) | 44 (1.06) | 0.77 (0.42–1.38) | 0.78 (0.45–1.35) |
| ≥2 falls ( | 74 (3.12) | 40 (1.78) | 1.69 (1.17–2.44) | 2.02 (1.15–3.54) |
a = fall rates per person-year
b = IRR for dance group compared to control group, allowing for cluster
c = Adjusted for age, sex, educational attainment, baseline MMSE, dancing status at baseline, fall risk at baseline.
The adjusted model included 521 participants due to one person with missing data on dancing status, and the adjusted model comparing previous fallers included 141 participants due to two participants with no data on history of falls.
Difference between baseline and “study-end” scores for the TMT and secondary outcomes by study allocation (n = 522).
| Dance | Control | Intervention effect: adjusted | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline Mean (SD) | 12 mo Mean (SD) | Baseline Mean (SD) | 12 mo Mean (SD) |
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| TMT | 44.8 (18.3) | 47.5 (22.9) | 40.0 (14.5) | 42.0 (18.6) | 0.8 | (0.6, 1.0) | 0.86 |
| TMT | 125.3 (66.9) | 130.4 (75.7) | 120.9 (69.8) | 119.9 (65.6) | 2.8 | (−6.2, 11.8) | 0.54 |
| TMT | 80.4 (56.1) | 82.9 (65.3) | 80.8 (63.0) | 77.9 (56.5) | 1.0 | (−8.5, 10.5) | 0.84 |
| PPA | 0.77 (1.29) | 1.02 (1.43) | 0.49 (1.07) | 0.69 (1.23) | 0.16 | (−0.15, 0.46) | 0.31 |
| Proprioception (degrees) | 1.91 (1.29) | 2.37 (1.81) | 1.81 (1.15) | 2.21 (1.54) | 0.15 | (−0.20, 0.49) | 0.41 |
| Leg strength (kg) | 22.1 (12.7) | 25.2 (12.1) | 22.9 (10.8) | 25.8 (12.3) | 0.3 | (−4.0, 4.5) | 0.91 |
| Postural sway (mm) | 172 (145) | 175 (191) | 138 (106) | 129 (100) | 1.24 | (1.00, 1.54) | 0.05 |
| Reaction time (s) | 257 (67) | 274 (95) | 253 (54) | 267 (73) | 1.00 | (0.95, 1.05) | 0.81 |
| SPPB | 10.2 (1.8) | 7.9 (4.8) | 10.6 (1.6) | 8.8 (4.3) | −0.6 | (−1.51, 0.33) | 0.21 |
| Repeated sit-to-stand | 12.7 (4.5) | 17.8 (10.8) | 12.3 (4.3) | 16.1 (9.9) | 1.5 | (−0.7, 3.8) | 0.19 |
| Gait speed | 0.94 (0.25) | 0.90 (0.28) | 1.01 (0.22) | 0.91 (0.24) | 0.02 | (−0.05, 0.11) | 0.68 |
| Quality of life | |||||||
| Physical component score | 43.0 (8.8) | 39.8 (10.9) | 44.3 (8.7) | 40.8 (10.8) | 0.0 | (1.8, 1.9) | 0.96 |
| Mental component score | 52.1 (8.4) | 49.4 (10.8) | 51.9 (7.6) | 50.3 (9.5) | −0.9 | (−2.9, 2.0) | 0.34 |
a = Between-group difference in 12 mo scores for all outcomes, except for “one leg stance”, were assessed using GEE adjusted for age, sex, educational attainment, and baseline outcome values, MMSE score and dancing status, and accounting for retirement village clustering effect. Between-group differences in “one leg stance” were estimated using Tobit regression models with the same covariates as above, robust standard errors accounting for retirement village clustering effect, and accounting for censored values (all participants given a maximum value of 10 s even if they could stand longer).
b = Trail Making Test
c = Physiological Performance Assessment
d = Short Physical Performance Battery
e = SF-12 v2 survey
f = represents antilogarithm of regression coefficient as GEE using logarithmic link function; value represents proportional difference in outcome between the dance and control groups.