...
首页> 外文期刊>BMC Public Health >Let’s walk! Age reattribution and physical activity among older Hispanic/Latino adults: results from the ?Caminemos! Randomized trial
【24h】

Let’s walk! Age reattribution and physical activity among older Hispanic/Latino adults: results from the ?Caminemos! Randomized trial

机译:让我们走路!老年人/拉丁裔成年人的年龄重新测绘和身体活动:Caminemos的结果!随机试验

获取原文

摘要

Many older Hispanics/Latinos are physically inactive and suffer the harmful health consequences associated with prolonged periods of inactivity. Negative age attributions that equate getting older with "slowing down" reinforce this inactive behavior. We implemented a community-based exercise intervention among insufficiently active older Hispanics/Latinos with a randomized trial of an attribution-retraining program, ?Caminemos! (Let's Walk!), and measured the effect of the program on walking behavior. Five hundred and seventy-two older Hispanics/Latinos (≥60?years) were enrolled in an exercise program that randomly assigned participants to the exercise class and one of two conditions: (a) treatment (attribution retraining to dispel the notion that physical activity inevitably ceases with age) or (b) control (generic health education). Data were collected at baseline and follow-up (1, 12, and 24?months). Physical activity was determined through pedometer data and the Yale Physical Activity Survey. We also measured the intervention effects on age-expectations, self-efficacy expectations, and outcome expectations for physical activity. Mixed-effects regression models were used to determine intervention effects on prospective measures of physical activity and intrapersonal expectations. The sample had a mean age of 73?years (SD?=?6.8) and was 77% female, and 76% of the sample reported income $20,000. At baseline, control and treatment groups walked about 3000 steps/day. By 24?months, participants in both arms of the intervention maintained greater than 10,000 mean steps/day, but the difference between the groups was not statistically significant. In analyses adjusted for age, sex, education, income, health status, and acculturation, participants in both trial arms increased their mean numbers of steps at 12 and 24?months, with the treatment group showing a greater number of mean steps compared to the controls at 12?months. In this group of physically inactive older Hispanics/Latinos, attribution retraining in combination with an exercise class was superior to the exercise class alone with regard to increasing walking behavior. This success was sustained at 12?months (the pre-defined primary study outcome) but not at 24?months. For older Hispanics/Latinos, enrollment in an attribution-retraining exercise program can improve an inactive lifestyle. clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT00183014 .
机译:许多老年人的西班牙裔/拉美裔人身体不活跃,遭受与长时间不活动相关的有害健康后果。否定年龄的归属于等同于“减速”增强这种非活动行为。我们在具有归属培训计划的随机试验中实现了基于社区的运动干预,归属于归因培训计划,?Caminemos! (让我们走路!),并测量程序对行走行为的影响。五百七十二岁的旧裔哥本/拉美裔人(≥60?年)被纳入一个随机分配参与者的运动阶层和两个条件之一:(a)治疗(归因于归因于身体活动的观念不可避免地随着年龄的增长(b)控制(通用健康教育)。在基线和后续行动(1,12和24个月)收集数据。通过计步器数据和耶鲁物体活动调查确定身体活动。我们还测量了对年龄期望,自我效能预期和身体活动的结果预期的干预效果。混合效应回归模型用于确定对体育活动和颅骨期望的前瞻性措施的干预效果。样品的平均年龄为73岁?年(SD?=?6.8),女性77%,76%的样品报告收入<20,000美元。在基线,控制和治疗组步行约3000步/天。到24个月,参与者在干预的两个武器中维持大于10,000平均步骤/日,但群体之间的差异没有统计学意义。在分析中,调整年龄,性别,教育,收入,健康状况和适应性,两者的参与者在12和24个月内增加其平均步骤数,治疗组显示与之相比的均衡步骤控制在12个月。几个月。在这组的身体不活跃的老年人/拉丁群体中,归因于与锻炼类的组合进行重新培训,同时在越来越多的行走行为方面优于锻炼类。这一成功持续了12个月(预定义的主要研究结果),但不是24个月。对于较旧的西班牙裔/拉丁岛,归因于归因 - 培训锻炼计划可以提高不活跃的生活方式。 ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT00183014。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号