Community-based exercise enhanced by a self-management programme to promote independent living in older adults: a pragmatic randomised controlled trial.

Autor: Olsen, Pia Øllgaard, Tully, Mark A, Cruz, Borja Del Pozo, Wegner, Manfred, Caserotti, Paolo
Předmět:
Zdroj: Age & Ageing; Jul2022, Vol. 51 Issue 7, p1-10, 10p, 1 Color Photograph, 2 Diagrams, 2 Charts
Abstrakt: Background older adults face several modifiable barriers for engaging in physical activity (PA) programmes such as incontinence, loneliness and fear of falling. Enhancing PA programmes with behavioural components to support self-management of such barriers may increase the effectiveness to preserve functional capacity and independent living. Objective this study aimed at assessing the effects of a complex active lifestyle intervention (CALSTI) on objective and self-report measures of functional capacity and disability in community-dwelling older adults. Subjects and Methods about 215 older adults (79.9 ± 0.4 years) at increased risk of functional decline were randomly allocated to (i) CALSTI consisting of 12-weeks progressive explosive resistance training (24 sessions) enhanced by a 24-week multi-factorial self-management programme (8 sessions), or (ii) an extended version of the self-management intervention (SEMAI; 12 sessions) to reflect a reinforcement of usual care. The interventions were embedded in a nationally regulated preventive care pathway. Blinded assessors collected primary (the Short Physical Performance Battery; SPPB) and secondary outcome data (self-reported difficulty in activities of daily living, the short version of the Late-Life Function and Disability Index, and the EQ-health VAS scale) at baseline and after 12 and 24 weeks. Results after 24 weeks, CALSTI led to a clinically superior increase in SPPB compared with SEMAI (+0.77 points, P  < 0.01), and the CALSTI group also demonstrated improvements in selected self-reported outcomes. Conclusions a novel complex exercise and multi-factorial self-management intervention embedded in preventive care practice had large and clinically meaningful effects on a key measure of functional capacity and predictor of disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index