| Literature DB >> 29609594 |
Jacqueline Kerr1, Dori Rosenberg2, Rachel A Millstein3, Khalisa Bolling4, Katie Crist4, Michelle Takemoto4, Suneeta Godbole4, Kevin Moran5, Loki Natarajan4, Cynthia Castro-Sweet6, David Buchner7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Older adults are the least active population group. Interventions in residential settings may support a multi-level approach to behavior change.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29609594 PMCID: PMC5879834 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-018-0658-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Fig. 1CONSORT diagram
Descriptive statistics for the sample at baseline at the participant level
| Control | Intervention | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age (years) | 85.3 (6.5) | 81.9 (5.9) | 0.007 |
| Gender (% female) | 71 | 74 | 0.47 |
| Education (% college and above) | 60 | 69 | 0.11 |
| Marital Status (% married) | 30 | 52 | 0.0002 |
| Moderate-Vigorous Physical Activitya | 2.3 (1.8, 3.8) | 3.1 (1.9, 4.9) | 0.261 |
| 400 m walking speed (meters/s) | 0.89(0.22) | 1.00(0.21) | 0.02 |
| SPPB score b | 7.96 (2.79) | 9.25 (2.60) | 0.07 |
| Systolic BP c | 130.70 (19.07) | 132.06 (19.24) | 0.59 |
| Diastolic BP c | 67.00 (8.88) | 69.24 (11.18) | 0.81 |
| % with BP c over 150/90 | 13.73 | 21.19 | 0.48 |
| LLFDI d score (range 10–50) | 36.34 (8.94) | 40.54 (8.32) | 0.29 |
| QoL e (range 1–5) | 3.85 (0.64) | 4.00 (0.64) | 0.26 |
| CESD f (range 0–30) | 6.17 (4.24) | 4.80 (3.76) | 0.19 |
| Stress (range 0–16) | 4.60 (2.51) | 3.79 (2.47) | 0.08 |
| Pain (range 6–30) | 10.02 (4.50) | 9.02 (4.25) | 0.41 |
| Fear of falling (range 16–64) | 27.88 (9.20) | 23.92 (6.89) | 0.12 |
*Computed using general linear mixed models with adjustment for site level clustering as a random effect
aNegative Binomial mixed model estimate with a ± 1 standard error adjusting for nesting of days within people
bShort Physical Performance Battery
cBlood pressure
dLate Life Function and Disability Instrument
eQuality of Life
fCenters for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale
Descriptive statistics of the accelerometer data collected across all time points
| Sample N | Total number of days available across sample | Average (SD) daily wear time minutes per person | Average (SD) wear days per person | Average (SD) daily minutes 760 CPM and above per person | Average (SD) daily minutes 1041 CPM and above (SD) per person | Average (SD) daily minutes 1952 CPM and above (SD) per persona | Total daily CPM | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | ||||||||
| Control | 156 | 925 | 821.80 (81.70) | 5.90 (1.60) | 39.19 (28.30) | 24.12 (20.72) | 6.76 (10.28) | 119,172.00 (61,583.76) |
| Intervention | 151 | 836 | 805.10 (79.10) | 5.50 (1.60) | 50.03 (29.02) | 31.74 (23.10) | 10.53 (13.58) | 141,578.8 (64,860.07) |
| 3 Months | ||||||||
| Control | 137 | 699 | 809.90 (81.30) | 5.10 (1.40) | 39.66 (29.49) | 24.80 (21.94) | 6.54 (9.91) | 117,389.50 (61,771.74) |
| Intervention | 128 | 666 | 825.10 (85.40) | 5.20 (1.40) | 67.24 (41.54) | 46.02 (34.23) | 18.31 (22.58) | 178,941.30 (96,481.19) |
| 6 Months | ||||||||
| Control | 127 | 681 | 811.40 (86.70) | 5.40 (1.20) | 39.24 (25.11) | 23.78 (18.08) | 6.29 (8.56) | 116,880.30 (52,371.70) |
| Intervention | 124 | 648 | 821.50 (78.40) | 5.20 (1.20) | 59.46 (40.05) | 40.59 (32.87) | 15.60 (20.11) | 162,962.20 (90,132.36) |
| 9 Months | ||||||||
| Control | 118 | 617 | 807.00 (89.50) | 5.23 (1.47) | 38.12 (26.53) | 22.52 (18.32) | 5.40 (7.83) | 113,715.40 (54,800.43) |
| Intervention | 116 | 613 | 818.53 (87.90) | 5.28 (1.43) | 53.56 (31.44) | 35.46 (26.34) | 12.87 (17.06) | 152,992.00 (77,138.23) |
| 12 Months | ||||||||
| Control | 107 | 596 | 807.01 (89.47) | 5.57 (1.30) | 38.70 (26.50) | 23.21 (19.62) | 5.96 (9.68) | 115,141.60 (56,778.73) |
| Intervention | 110 | 602 | 816.58 (87.59) | 5.47 (1.24) | 56.79 (38.32) | 37.45 (30.38) | 13.38 (16.87) | 156,379.70 (84,016.68) |
aStatistical analyses for intervention effects presented for 1952 CPM only
Fig. 2Differences in moderate vigorous physical activity (MVPA) between intervention and control conditions over time, adjusting for baseline demographic differences, nesting of days within people and people within sites