A randomized controlled clinical trial of the Seattle Protocol for Activity in older adults |
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Authors: | Teri Linda McCurry Susan M Logsdon Rebecca G Gibbons Laura E Buchner David M Larson Eric B |
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Affiliation: | Departments of Psychosocial and Community Health, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98115, USA. lteri@uw.edu |
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Abstract: | OBJECTIVES: To compare the efficacy of a physical activity program (Seattle Protocol for Activity (SPA)) for low‐exercising older adults with that of an educational health promotion program (HP), combination treatment (SPA+HP), and routine medical care control conditions (RMC). DESIGN: Single‐blind, randomized controlled trial with two‐by‐two factorial design. SETTING: Community centers in King County, Washington, from November 2001 to September 2004. PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred seventy‐three community‐residing, cognitively intact older adults (mean age 79.2; 62% women). INTERVENTIONS: SPA (in‐class exercises with assistance setting weekly home exercise goals) and HP (information about age‐appropriate topics relevant to enhancing health), with randomization to four conditions: SPA only (n=69), HP only (n=73), SPA+HP (n=67), and RMC control (n=64). Active‐treatment participants attended nine group classes over 3 months followed by five booster sessions over 1 year. MEASUREMENTS: Self‐rated health (Medical Outcomes Study 36‐item Short‐Form Survey) and depression (Geriatric Depression Scale). Secondary ratings of physical performance, treatment adherence, and self‐rated health and affective function were also collected. RESULTS: At 3 months, participants in SPA exercised more and had significantly better self‐reported health, strength, and general well‐being (P<.05) than participants in HP or RMC. Over 18 months, SPA participants maintained health and physical function benefits and had continued to exercise more than non‐SPA participants. SPA+HP was not significantly better than SPA alone. Better adherence was associated with better outcomes. CONCLUSION: Older adults participating in low levels of regular exercise can establish and maintain a home‐based exercise program that yields immediate and long‐term physical and affective benefits. |
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Keywords: | exercise health promotion aging older adults |
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