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Physical activity and functional ability in care home residents

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Physical activity and functional ability in care home residents. / Bampouras, Theodoros; Atkinson, Ashlea; Hayes, Lawrence.
In: Journal of Physical Activity and Health, Vol. 15, No. 10 Suppl. 1, 10.2018, p. S136-S136.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineMeeting abstractpeer-review

Harvard

Bampouras, T, Atkinson, A & Hayes, L 2018, 'Physical activity and functional ability in care home residents', Journal of Physical Activity and Health, vol. 15, no. 10 Suppl. 1, pp. S136-S136. https://doi.org/10.1123/jpah.2018-0535

APA

Bampouras, T., Atkinson, A., & Hayes, L. (2018). Physical activity and functional ability in care home residents. Journal of Physical Activity and Health, 15(10 Suppl. 1), S136-S136. https://doi.org/10.1123/jpah.2018-0535

Vancouver

Bampouras T, Atkinson A, Hayes L. Physical activity and functional ability in care home residents. Journal of Physical Activity and Health. 2018 Oct;15(10 Suppl. 1):S136-S136. doi: 10.1123/jpah.2018-0535

Author

Bampouras, Theodoros ; Atkinson, Ashlea ; Hayes, Lawrence. / Physical activity and functional ability in care home residents. In: Journal of Physical Activity and Health. 2018 ; Vol. 15, No. 10 Suppl. 1. pp. S136-S136.

Bibtex

@article{46172407ad8f48879e9d8a6df327b27c,
title = "Physical activity and functional ability in care home residents",
abstract = "Physical activity (PA) recommendations exist for care home residents, yet few studies have examined functional ability to determine feasibility of these guidelines. The present study compared functional ability of care home residents to community-dwelling adults. Eleven care home individuals and eleven community-dwelling individuals participated in the study. We assessed functional ability by means of handgrip, one-legged stance (1LS, maximum 45s duration), timed 8 foot up-and-go (TUG), back-scratch (BS), chair sit-and-reach (CSR), 30 s chair sit-to-stand (StoS)and daily step count (Step). When controlling for age, care home residents had poorer handgrip strength (p = 0.002 left, p = 0.002 right), 1LS (p<0.001), TUG (p = 0.001), BS (p = 0.001), CSR (p = 0.022) and Step (p = 0.001) performance, while performance in the StoS was similar (p = 0.088). Care home residents demonstrated lower functional ability, raising concerns regarding their ability to meet PA recommendations. Perhaps most concerning is the low level of objectively measured PA (<10% that of community-dwelling participants). Present data support promotion of PA during earlier stages of the lifespan, to prevent functional decline and promote increased healthspan.",
author = "Theodoros Bampouras and Ashlea Atkinson and Lawrence Hayes",
year = "2018",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1123/jpah.2018-0535",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "S136--S136",
journal = "Journal of Physical Activity and Health",
issn = "1543-3080",
publisher = "HUMAN KINETICS PUBL INC",
number = "10 Suppl. 1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physical activity and functional ability in care home residents

AU - Bampouras, Theodoros

AU - Atkinson, Ashlea

AU - Hayes, Lawrence

PY - 2018/10

Y1 - 2018/10

N2 - Physical activity (PA) recommendations exist for care home residents, yet few studies have examined functional ability to determine feasibility of these guidelines. The present study compared functional ability of care home residents to community-dwelling adults. Eleven care home individuals and eleven community-dwelling individuals participated in the study. We assessed functional ability by means of handgrip, one-legged stance (1LS, maximum 45s duration), timed 8 foot up-and-go (TUG), back-scratch (BS), chair sit-and-reach (CSR), 30 s chair sit-to-stand (StoS)and daily step count (Step). When controlling for age, care home residents had poorer handgrip strength (p = 0.002 left, p = 0.002 right), 1LS (p<0.001), TUG (p = 0.001), BS (p = 0.001), CSR (p = 0.022) and Step (p = 0.001) performance, while performance in the StoS was similar (p = 0.088). Care home residents demonstrated lower functional ability, raising concerns regarding their ability to meet PA recommendations. Perhaps most concerning is the low level of objectively measured PA (<10% that of community-dwelling participants). Present data support promotion of PA during earlier stages of the lifespan, to prevent functional decline and promote increased healthspan.

AB - Physical activity (PA) recommendations exist for care home residents, yet few studies have examined functional ability to determine feasibility of these guidelines. The present study compared functional ability of care home residents to community-dwelling adults. Eleven care home individuals and eleven community-dwelling individuals participated in the study. We assessed functional ability by means of handgrip, one-legged stance (1LS, maximum 45s duration), timed 8 foot up-and-go (TUG), back-scratch (BS), chair sit-and-reach (CSR), 30 s chair sit-to-stand (StoS)and daily step count (Step). When controlling for age, care home residents had poorer handgrip strength (p = 0.002 left, p = 0.002 right), 1LS (p<0.001), TUG (p = 0.001), BS (p = 0.001), CSR (p = 0.022) and Step (p = 0.001) performance, while performance in the StoS was similar (p = 0.088). Care home residents demonstrated lower functional ability, raising concerns regarding their ability to meet PA recommendations. Perhaps most concerning is the low level of objectively measured PA (<10% that of community-dwelling participants). Present data support promotion of PA during earlier stages of the lifespan, to prevent functional decline and promote increased healthspan.

U2 - 10.1123/jpah.2018-0535

DO - 10.1123/jpah.2018-0535

M3 - Meeting abstract

VL - 15

SP - S136-S136

JO - Journal of Physical Activity and Health

JF - Journal of Physical Activity and Health

SN - 1543-3080

IS - 10 Suppl. 1

ER -