학술논문

Yoga to prevent mobility limitations in older adults: feasibility of a randomized controlled trial.
Document Type
article
Source
BMC geriatrics. 18(1)
Subject
Humans
Gait
Yoga
Retrospective Studies
Follow-Up Studies
Feasibility Studies
Pilot Projects
Health Education
Aged
Aged
80 and over
Middle Aged
Disabled Persons
Patient Satisfaction
Female
Male
Mobility Limitation
Muscle Stretching Exercises
Self Report
Feasibility
Mobility
Physical function
Clinical Sciences
Human Movement and Sports Sciences
Geriatrics
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThe loss of mobility during aging impacts independence and leads to further disability, morbidity, and reduced life expectancy. Our objective was to examine the feasibility and safety of conducting a randomized controlled trial of yoga for older adults at risk for mobility limitations.MethodsSedentary older adults (n = 46; age 60-89) were recruited and randomized to either yoga or a health education comparison group. Yoga sessions (60-min) occurred 2x weekly, and 90-min health education sessions occurred weekly, for 10 weeks. The primary outcomes were recruitment rate, intervention attendance, and retention at assessments. Adverse event rates and participant satisfaction were also measured. Physical performance measures of gait, balance, and strength and self-report outcome measures were administered at baseline and 10-weeks.ResultsRecruitment lasted 6 months. Retention of participants at the 10-week follow-up was high (89% - performance measures; 98% - self-report questionnaires). Attendance was good with 82% of yoga and 74% of health education participants attending at least 50% of the sessions. No serious adverse events were reported. Patient satisfaction with the interventions was high. The mean effect size for the physical performance measures was 0.35 with some over 0.50. The mean effect size for self-report outcome measures was 0.36.ConclusionsResults indicate that it is feasible to conduct a larger RCT of yoga for sedentary older adults at risk for mobility problems. The yoga and comparison interventions were safe, well accepted, and well attended. Effect sizes suggest yoga may have important benefits for this population and should be studied further.Trial registrationClinicalTrials # NCT03544879 ; Retrospectively registered 4 June, 2018.