Let’s Get Everyone Moving: Intervention Sets Older Women on a Healthier Journey

Although regular physical exercise is vital for everyone’s health, two groups tend to fall well below the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans: woman and older adults.   

Researchers from Texas A&M University School of Public Health launched an intervention program called Strong Hearts, Healthy Communities 2.0 (SHHC-2.0)  to motivate older women to participate in regular physical exercise. The program was conducted over a 24-week cluster and included two 60-minute classes a week. The participants were women (n = 182) aged 40 and better living in 11 rural senior living communities. The classes included exercise, nutrition knowledge, and civic engagement. Data were collected via surveys, and physical activity outcomes were collected via accelerometry. The results showed that this type of intervention increased physical activity and had positive effects on related outcomes measures such as social support for exercise, attitudes toward exercise, and self-efficacy. 

In short, this study seems to provide hopeful evidence that interventional programs like this can be of great benefit to kick starting a healthier journey for older adults by offering them different exercises, food knowledge, and the opportunity to engage in these exercises within a social context. Such a program could be a good blueprint for senior living communities to adopt. 

 

Want to keep up with recent research that’s relevant to aging services? Use the form below to subscribe to our monthly InvestigAge email.      

 

Source: 

Maddock, J.E., Demment, M., Graham, M. et al. (2022). Changes in physical activity outcomes in the Strong Hearts, Healthy Communities (SHHC-2.0) community-based randomized trial. Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act 19, 159. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12966-022-01401-1  

Self-Fulfilling ProphecyHow Perceptions of Aging Affect Our Later Years

Learn how older adults’ perceptions of aging—and their self-perceptions—can have serious effects on their health, behaviors, and even longevity.

Download FREE Copy
[feather_share show="twitter, linkedin, facebook, mail" hide="google_plus"]

    Add insight to your inbox

    Join our email list to receive information about the latest research from Mather Institute. Just complete the form below to subscribe.

    Thank you!

    You are now subscribed to the email list.
    A confirmation has been sent to the email you provided.

    Continue to Website Share with a Friend
    Close