2007
DOI: 10.1249/mss.0b013e318145348d
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Activity Adherence and Physical Function in Older Adults with Functional Limitations

Abstract: Adherence to physical activity in LIFE-P was associated with greater improvement in SPPB score and was consistent with adherence in physical activity trials of shorter duration in this subgroup of older adults. Older individuals at risk for disability can adhere to a regular program of physical activity in a long-term randomized trial.

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Cited by 73 publications
(74 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
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“…Longer-duration RCTs (12 months) have shown lower adherence rates compared to shorter trials (2-4 months) (Nyman & Victor, 2012). However, the mean adherence in the moderate adherers (53%) in our study is comparable to the adherence (50%) among sedentary 70-89 year old adults who participated in a weekly center-based physical activity intervention (Fielding et al, 2007). Although comorbidities and functional limitations among the present participants were common due to population-based sampling, the dropout rate due to death or institutionalization was low.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 60%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Longer-duration RCTs (12 months) have shown lower adherence rates compared to shorter trials (2-4 months) (Nyman & Victor, 2012). However, the mean adherence in the moderate adherers (53%) in our study is comparable to the adherence (50%) among sedentary 70-89 year old adults who participated in a weekly center-based physical activity intervention (Fielding et al, 2007). Although comorbidities and functional limitations among the present participants were common due to population-based sampling, the dropout rate due to death or institutionalization was low.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 60%
“…Previous studies have reported adherence to shorter-term (Fielding et al, 2007;Sjösten et al, 2007) or homebased exercise interventions (Jette et al, 1998) and assessed selfreport measures such as self-efficacy (Koeneman, Verheijden, Chinapaw, & Hopman-Rock, 2011), attitudes (Hawley-Hague et al, 2014 or socioeconomic characteristics (Chevan, 2008) as potential determinants of training adherence. However, the role of health and physical function related factors in predicting SBT adherence has not been reported previously.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For 48 participants included in the analysis of the number of sessions attended, the mean number attended was 19.3 sessions, with 35 participants attending all 24 sessions. Although this incompletion rate may seem to be high, it should be considered in the context of other studies of lifestyle intervention in patients with CKD (25) and other patients with multiple comorbidities (26,27). In the LANDMARK III substudy, in which 12% of patients with CKD in the intervention group dropped out, those remaining attended 70% of supervised gym-based sessions (25).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In the LANDMARK III substudy, in which 12% of patients with CKD in the intervention group dropped out, those remaining attended 70% of supervised gym-based sessions (25). In more general studies not restricted to patients with CKD, such as the Lifestyle Interventions and Independence for Elders Pilot, in which Fielding et al (26) assessed activity adherence in 424 sedentary older adults with functional limitations, and the Diabetes Prevention Program analysis by Crandall et al (27), which looked at the influence of age on the effects of lifestyle modifications and metformin to prevent diabetes, adherence rates ranged from 34% to 76%.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Generally, 60-85% adherence to physical activity in impaired elderly is considered very high (Fielding et al 2007). In tango studies completed by Hackney & Earhart, participants were compliant with the regimen, reported favorable impressions and expressed interest in continuing (Hackney et al 2007a,b, Hackney & Earhart 2009.…”
Section: Adherence To Physical Activity Programmentioning
confidence: 99%