Recalibrating disparities in perceived and actual balance abilities in older adults: a mixed-methods evaluation of a novel exergaming intervention

Abstract Background Published reports suggest a disparity between perceived and actual balance abilities, a trait associated with increased fall-risk in older adults. We investigate whether it is possible to ‘recalibrate’ these disparities using a novel gaming intervention. Methods We recruited 26 o...

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Main Authors: Toby J. Ellmers, Ioannis Th. Paraskevopoulos, A. Mark Williams, William R. Young
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-03-01
Series:Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-018-0369-8
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spelling doaj-e837a93c729845ddb31d0c2c057702692020-11-24T21:23:14ZengBMCJournal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation1743-00032018-03-0115111210.1186/s12984-018-0369-8Recalibrating disparities in perceived and actual balance abilities in older adults: a mixed-methods evaluation of a novel exergaming interventionToby J. Ellmers0Ioannis Th. Paraskevopoulos1A. Mark Williams2William R. Young3Department of Clinical Sciences, Brunel University LondonDepartment of Computing and Information Systems, University of GreenwichDepartment of Health, Kinesiology and Recreation, College of Heath, University of UtahDepartment of Clinical Sciences, Brunel University LondonAbstract Background Published reports suggest a disparity between perceived and actual balance abilities, a trait associated with increased fall-risk in older adults. We investigate whether it is possible to ‘recalibrate’ these disparities using a novel gaming intervention. Methods We recruited 26 older adults for a 4-week intervention in which they participated in 8-sessions using a novel gaming intervention designed to provide explicit, augmented feedback related to postural control. Measures of perceived balance abilities (Falls Efficacy Scale-International) and actual postural control (limits of stability) were assessed pre- and post-intervention. We used focus groups to elicit the opinions of participants about how the game may have influenced balance abilities and confidence. Results A stronger alignment was observed between postural control and perceived balance capabilities post-intervention (i.e., significant correlations between Falls Efficacy Scale-International scores and limits of stability which were not present pre-intervention). Also, significant improvements in measures of postural control were observed, with these improvements confined to the aspects of postural control for which the exergame provided explicit, augmented feedback. Qualitative data revealed that the intervention made participants more “aware” of their balance abilities. Conclusions Our results demonstrate that it is possible to recalibrate the perceptions of older adults relating to their balance abilities through a targeted, short-term intervention. We propose that the post-intervention improvements in postural control may have been, in part, the result of this recalibration; with altered perceptions leading to changes in balance performance. Findings support the application of novel interventions aimed at addressing the psychological factors associated with elderly falls.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-018-0369-8Self-efficacyBalance confidencePerceived balance abilitiesExergame intervention
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Toby J. Ellmers
Ioannis Th. Paraskevopoulos
A. Mark Williams
William R. Young
spellingShingle Toby J. Ellmers
Ioannis Th. Paraskevopoulos
A. Mark Williams
William R. Young
Recalibrating disparities in perceived and actual balance abilities in older adults: a mixed-methods evaluation of a novel exergaming intervention
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Self-efficacy
Balance confidence
Perceived balance abilities
Exergame intervention
author_facet Toby J. Ellmers
Ioannis Th. Paraskevopoulos
A. Mark Williams
William R. Young
author_sort Toby J. Ellmers
title Recalibrating disparities in perceived and actual balance abilities in older adults: a mixed-methods evaluation of a novel exergaming intervention
title_short Recalibrating disparities in perceived and actual balance abilities in older adults: a mixed-methods evaluation of a novel exergaming intervention
title_full Recalibrating disparities in perceived and actual balance abilities in older adults: a mixed-methods evaluation of a novel exergaming intervention
title_fullStr Recalibrating disparities in perceived and actual balance abilities in older adults: a mixed-methods evaluation of a novel exergaming intervention
title_full_unstemmed Recalibrating disparities in perceived and actual balance abilities in older adults: a mixed-methods evaluation of a novel exergaming intervention
title_sort recalibrating disparities in perceived and actual balance abilities in older adults: a mixed-methods evaluation of a novel exergaming intervention
publisher BMC
series Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
issn 1743-0003
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Abstract Background Published reports suggest a disparity between perceived and actual balance abilities, a trait associated with increased fall-risk in older adults. We investigate whether it is possible to ‘recalibrate’ these disparities using a novel gaming intervention. Methods We recruited 26 older adults for a 4-week intervention in which they participated in 8-sessions using a novel gaming intervention designed to provide explicit, augmented feedback related to postural control. Measures of perceived balance abilities (Falls Efficacy Scale-International) and actual postural control (limits of stability) were assessed pre- and post-intervention. We used focus groups to elicit the opinions of participants about how the game may have influenced balance abilities and confidence. Results A stronger alignment was observed between postural control and perceived balance capabilities post-intervention (i.e., significant correlations between Falls Efficacy Scale-International scores and limits of stability which were not present pre-intervention). Also, significant improvements in measures of postural control were observed, with these improvements confined to the aspects of postural control for which the exergame provided explicit, augmented feedback. Qualitative data revealed that the intervention made participants more “aware” of their balance abilities. Conclusions Our results demonstrate that it is possible to recalibrate the perceptions of older adults relating to their balance abilities through a targeted, short-term intervention. We propose that the post-intervention improvements in postural control may have been, in part, the result of this recalibration; with altered perceptions leading to changes in balance performance. Findings support the application of novel interventions aimed at addressing the psychological factors associated with elderly falls.
topic Self-efficacy
Balance confidence
Perceived balance abilities
Exergame intervention
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-018-0369-8
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