TY - JOUR AU - Tiedemann A. AU - Hassett L. AU - Sherrington C. AB -

OBJECTIVE: Well-designed exercise can prevent falls in older people but previous research indicates that promoting general physical activity may increase falls. This study aimed to evaluate uptake and adherence to a physical activity promotion and fall prevention intervention among community-dwelling people aged 60 + years. METHODS: This was a process evaluation of intervention group data from an ongoing randomised controlled trial. Participants were 38 Australian community-dwelling older people assigned to intervention group who had completed 3 months of a physical activity and fall prevention intervention. Study measures included baseline daily step count assessed by Actigraph accelerometers, 12 week follow-up step count assessed by Fitbit pedometers and rating of participant engagement with the health coaching intervention. RESULTS: 35 participants remained in the study at week 12 and were analysed. Mean daily steps significantly increased in week 12 compared with steps at baseline (change in mean = 1101 steps, 95% CI: 285-1917, p = 0.01). Health coaching engagement was rated as high for 19 people (54%), medium for 12 (34%) and low for 4 people (12%). All participants used the Fitbit to provide feedback about daily activity. CONCLUSION: The excellent intervention compliance and promising physical activity results demonstrate the acceptability and feasibility of this novel intervention.

AD - The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney, Australia. AN - 26844124 BT - Prev Med Rep C2 - PMC4721478 DP - NLM ET - 2016/02/05 LA - eng LB - AUS
MSK
FY16 N1 - Tiedemann, Anne
Hassett, Leanne
Sherrington, Catherine
United States
Prev Med Rep. 2015 Jul 21;2:595-7. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2015.07.008. eCollection 2015. N2 -

OBJECTIVE: Well-designed exercise can prevent falls in older people but previous research indicates that promoting general physical activity may increase falls. This study aimed to evaluate uptake and adherence to a physical activity promotion and fall prevention intervention among community-dwelling people aged 60 + years. METHODS: This was a process evaluation of intervention group data from an ongoing randomised controlled trial. Participants were 38 Australian community-dwelling older people assigned to intervention group who had completed 3 months of a physical activity and fall prevention intervention. Study measures included baseline daily step count assessed by Actigraph accelerometers, 12 week follow-up step count assessed by Fitbit pedometers and rating of participant engagement with the health coaching intervention. RESULTS: 35 participants remained in the study at week 12 and were analysed. Mean daily steps significantly increased in week 12 compared with steps at baseline (change in mean = 1101 steps, 95% CI: 285-1917, p = 0.01). Health coaching engagement was rated as high for 19 people (54%), medium for 12 (34%) and low for 4 people (12%). All participants used the Fitbit to provide feedback about daily activity. CONCLUSION: The excellent intervention compliance and promising physical activity results demonstrate the acceptability and feasibility of this novel intervention.

PY - 2015 SN - 2211-3355 (Electronic)
2211-3355 (Linking) SP - 595 EP - 7 T2 - Prev Med Rep TI - A novel approach to the issue of physical inactivity in older age VL - 2 Y2 - FY16 ER -