Exercise in older adults and maintenance of the behavior
Tom Creer, PhD
July 23, 2008
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Greaney and coworkers examined the efficacy of an intervention tailored to the individual's stage of change for exercise adoption on exercise stage of change, physical activity, and physical function in community-dwelling older adults. Participants (N=966) were randomly assigned to a print and telephone intervention or a contact comparison group. Through the use of longitudinal analyses, the investigators examined the intervention's effectiveness in promoting stage progression, altering decisional balance and the processes of change, increasing self-efficacy and physical activity, and improving physical function among older adults who completed the 24-month study. Similar analyses were conducted that excluded individuals who were in maintenance at baseline and at 24 months. At the end of the study, there were no differences in stage progression, self-efficacy, decisional balance, the processes of change, physical activity, or physical function by intervention assignment. When the analyses excluded those participants (n = 358) who were in the maintenance stage for exercise, the investigators found that, compared with the comparison group, a greater proportion of individuals who received the exercise intervention progressed in stage by 24 months. Conversely, more individuals in the comparison group remained stable or regressed in stage compared with the intervention group.

WHAT THE STUDY MAY MEAN TO YOU AS A HEALTH CARE PROVIDER: Greaney and his colleagues concluded that their results indicate that a tailored intervention is effective in increasing motivational readiness for exercise in individuals who were in stages of change other than maintenance.

WHAT THE STUDY MAY MEAN TO YOU AS A PATIENT: It is always difficult to determine the role of stages in research such as described in the study. However, if you perform exercise regularly, you should develop the self-efficacy to continue with the behavior.

ML Greaney et al. Long-term effects of a stage-based intervention for changing exercise intentions and behavior in older adults. Gerontologist, 2008;48:358-367.

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