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Engineering Improved Balance Confidence in Older Adults With Complex Health Care Needs: Learning From the Muscling Up Against Disability Study

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- Title
- Engineering Improved Balance Confidence in Older Adults With Complex Health Care Needs: Learning From the Muscling Up Against Disability Study
- Author/Creator
-
Hetherington, Sharon |
Henwood, Tim |
Swinton, Paul |
Keogh, Justin W L |
Gardiner, Paul |
Tuckett, Anthony |
Rouse, Kevin
- Description
- Objective: To investigate the associations of balance confidence with physical and cognitive markers of well-being in older adults receiving government-funded aged care services and whether progressive resistance plus balance training could positively influence change. Design: Intervention study. Setting: Community-based older adult–specific exercise clinic. Participants: Older adults (N=245) with complex care needs who were receiving government-funded aged care support. Interventions: Twenty-four weeks of twice weekly progressive resistance plus balance training carried out under the supervision of accredited exercise physiologists. Main Outcome Measures: The primary measure was the Activity-specific Balance Confidence Scale. Secondary measures included the Short Physical Performance Battery; fall history gathered as part of the health history questionnaire; hierarchical timed balance tests; Geriatric Anxiety Index; Geriatric Depression Scale; Fatigue, Resistance, Ambulation, Illness, Loss of Weight scale; and EuroQoL-5 dimension 3 level. Results: At baseline, better physical performance (r=.54; P<.01) and quality of life (r=.52; P<.01) predicted better balance confidence. In contrast, at baseline, higher levels of frailty predicted worse balance confidence (r=−.55; P<.01). Change in balance confidence after the exercise intervention was accompanied by improved physical performance (+12%) and reduced frailty (−11%). Baseline balance confidence was identified as the most consistent negative predictor of change scores across the intervention. Conclusions: This study shows that reduced physical performance and quality of life and increased frailty are predictive of worse balance confidence in older adults with aged care needs. However, when a targeted intervention of resistance and balance exercise is implemented that reduces frailty and improves physical performance, balance confidence will also improve. Given the influence of balance confidence on a raft of well-being determinants, including the capacity for positive physical and cognitive change, this study offers important insight to those looking to reduce falls in older adults. © 2018 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine
- Relation
- Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation / Vol. 99, No. 8, pp.1525-1532
- Relation
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apmr.2018.03.004
- Year
- 2018
- Publisher
- W.B. Saunders Co.
- Subject
-
FoR 1103 (Clinical Sciences) |
FoR 1106 (Human Movement and Sports Science) |
FoR 1117 (Public Health and Health Services) |
aging |
exercise |
rehabilitation
- Resource Type
- Journal Article
- Identifier
- ISSN: 0003-9993
- Reviewed

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