Tailored Exercise For Fall And Fracture Prevention In Older Adults: A Family Health Team Approach
Background: Exercise interventions reduce falls in older adults. Methods for enhancing uptake and adherence to exercise programs in at-risk individuals are needed. Objectives: This pilot study evaluated feasibility of recruitment, short-term retention and adherence to PEPTEAM (Prescribe Exercise for...
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ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-70582013-10-04T04:11:53ZSkidmore, Carly2012-09-27T17:55:16Z2012-09-27T17:55:16Z2012-09-27T17:55:16Z2012-09-10http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7058Background: Exercise interventions reduce falls in older adults. Methods for enhancing uptake and adherence to exercise programs in at-risk individuals are needed. Objectives: This pilot study evaluated feasibility of recruitment, short-term retention and adherence to PEPTEAM (Prescribe Exercise for Prevention of Falls and Fractures), an exercise plus behaviour change intervention. Methods: Patients > 65 years old plus ≥ 1 additional risk factor for falls/fractures (≥2 falls in 6 months, age 75+, high CAROC fracture risk, difficulty walking/balance, acute fall, fragility fracture) were identified by nursing staff at the Center for Family Medicine. The intervention was delivered in two visits, with two follow-up calls, and included: a) physician telling the patient they are at risk; b) exercise prescription provided by a physical therapist; c) motivational interviewing, action and coping planning delivered by a kinesiologist. The primary outcome was change in minutes per day of moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) from baseline to six-week follow-up, measured using X2 mini accelerometers. Secondary outcomes included: feasibility of recruitment and retention, an action planning questionnaire, EQ-5D-5L, Short Physical Performance Battery, and the Timed Up and Go. Adherence to exercise was determined using activity logs. Results: 92 patients were screened, 22 were eligible and 11 were recruited (mean [SD] age 72.64 [6.47] years). All participants returned at 6 weeks. Adherence to exercise was 52%. Mean [SD] minutes of MVPA were 24.7 [22.8] at baseline and 21.6 [15.8] at six weeks (p=0.722). Participant action planning and coping planning abilities were significantly improved (P=0.008), (P=0.012) respectively. Patient-rated health at 6 weeks also significantly improved (P=0.010). Conclusion: Many but not all patients demonstrated positive changes in intensity-specific MVPA. The feasibility information collected from this study in addition to practical recommendations identified for future work could be used to inform a future multicenter randomized controlled trial.enTailored Exercise For Fall And Fracture Prevention In Older Adults: A Family Health Team ApproachThesis or DissertationKinesiologyMaster of ScienceKinesiology |
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Kinesiology Skidmore, Carly Tailored Exercise For Fall And Fracture Prevention In Older Adults: A Family Health Team Approach |
description |
Background: Exercise interventions reduce falls in older adults. Methods for enhancing uptake and adherence to exercise programs in at-risk individuals are needed. Objectives: This pilot study evaluated feasibility of recruitment, short-term retention and adherence to PEPTEAM (Prescribe Exercise for Prevention of Falls and Fractures), an exercise plus behaviour change intervention.
Methods: Patients > 65 years old plus ≥ 1 additional risk factor for falls/fractures (≥2 falls in 6 months, age 75+, high CAROC fracture risk, difficulty walking/balance, acute fall, fragility fracture) were identified by nursing staff at the Center for Family Medicine. The intervention was delivered in two visits, with two follow-up calls, and included: a) physician telling the patient they are at risk; b) exercise prescription provided by a physical therapist; c) motivational interviewing, action and coping planning delivered by a kinesiologist. The primary outcome was change in minutes per day of moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) from baseline to six-week follow-up, measured using X2 mini accelerometers. Secondary outcomes included: feasibility of recruitment and retention, an action planning questionnaire, EQ-5D-5L, Short Physical Performance Battery, and the Timed Up and Go. Adherence to exercise was determined using activity logs.
Results: 92 patients were screened, 22 were eligible and 11 were recruited (mean [SD] age 72.64 [6.47] years). All participants returned at 6 weeks. Adherence to exercise was 52%. Mean [SD] minutes of MVPA were 24.7 [22.8] at baseline and 21.6 [15.8] at six weeks (p=0.722). Participant action planning and coping planning abilities were significantly improved (P=0.008), (P=0.012) respectively. Patient-rated health at 6 weeks also significantly improved (P=0.010).
Conclusion: Many but not all patients demonstrated positive changes in intensity-specific MVPA. The feasibility information collected from this study in addition to practical recommendations identified for future work could be used to inform a future multicenter randomized controlled trial. |
author |
Skidmore, Carly |
author_facet |
Skidmore, Carly |
author_sort |
Skidmore, Carly |
title |
Tailored Exercise For Fall And Fracture Prevention In Older Adults: A Family Health Team Approach |
title_short |
Tailored Exercise For Fall And Fracture Prevention In Older Adults: A Family Health Team Approach |
title_full |
Tailored Exercise For Fall And Fracture Prevention In Older Adults: A Family Health Team Approach |
title_fullStr |
Tailored Exercise For Fall And Fracture Prevention In Older Adults: A Family Health Team Approach |
title_full_unstemmed |
Tailored Exercise For Fall And Fracture Prevention In Older Adults: A Family Health Team Approach |
title_sort |
tailored exercise for fall and fracture prevention in older adults: a family health team approach |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7058 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT skidmorecarly tailoredexerciseforfallandfracturepreventioninolderadultsafamilyhealthteamapproach |
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