2018
DOI: 10.1123/japa.2017-0009
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One-Year Adherence to the Otago Exercise Program With or Without Motivational Interviewing in Community-Dwelling Older Adults

Abstract: This study investigated if behavioral factors, treatment with behavioral support, readiness to change, fall self-efficacy, and activity habits could predict long-term adherence to an exercise program. Included in this study were 114 community-dwelling older adults who had participated in one of two home-based exercise interventions. Behavioral factors associated with adherence to the exercise program over 52 weeks were analyzed. The behavioral factors, specifically activity habits at baseline, significantly pr… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Three home-exercise sessions per week were achieved by 13 participants in the OEP group (21% of allocated) and by 13 participants in the OEP + MI group (22% of allocated), and a frequency of three exercise sessions + three walks per week were achieved by nine participants in each of the intervention groups. Further information regarding adherence data related to this study has been analyzed and presented earlier (Arkkukangas et al, 2018).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three home-exercise sessions per week were achieved by 13 participants in the OEP group (21% of allocated) and by 13 participants in the OEP + MI group (22% of allocated), and a frequency of three exercise sessions + three walks per week were achieved by nine participants in each of the intervention groups. Further information regarding adherence data related to this study has been analyzed and presented earlier (Arkkukangas et al, 2018).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The patient preference trial is an appealing method to try to improve adherence in interventions [29]. Indeed, our study had better adherence to the programme during the intervention than other studies with the Otago Exercise Programme where participants were randomised [12,30,31]. Further, in this feasibility study it was notable that the participants' characteristics were comparable at study start for the two groups after the self-selected choice of programme.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…week. Arkkukangas et al [31] also showed in a one-year study, 46% adherence for a minimum of two exercise sessions per week, while at 12 weeks follow-up adherence reached 77% [35]. Davis et al [12] described 36% adherence for at least two sessions per week among participants that complied with a six months intervention study with DVD support for home exercise with the Otago Exercise Programme.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…showed adherence rates of 77% at 12 weeks follow-up [32], and after one year 46% [33]; for a minimum of two exercise sessions per…”
Section: Adherencementioning
confidence: 98%