Seasonal Variation of Physical Activity in Community-Living vs. Residential-Dwelling Older Adults

  • Sherry A. Barkley Exercise and Sports Sciences Department, Augustana University
  • Stephen D. Herrmann Sanford Research

Abstract

Background and Purpose: Although physical activity (PA) is important for all ages including older adults, participation may be influenced by weather variation and access to programming. Our primary aim was determine if PA participation is influenced by season and place of residence. A secondary aim was to compare objective and subjective measure of PA participation. Methods: Participants included older individuals (age>65) living in a residential retirement community (RR) with access to an on-site fitness facility (n=7) and additional volunteers (n=9) who lived at home and traveled to exercise at a nonresidential community (NR) activities center Accelerometers were used to measure daily PA during the summer and again during the winter. Results: PA for the NR group was higher in the summer (268.4�73.7 min vs. RR=186.8�68.0, p=0.039), but not in the winter (NR=261.8�92.6 min, RR=182.0�72.5, p=0.082). No within-group change in PA was noted from summer to winter for either group (p>0.05). The correlation between subjective and objective measures of PA was low (r=.262). Conclusion: Access to appropriate facilities and programming serves to help older individuals maintain PA levels despite seasonal weather variations. The low correlation between objective and subjective measures suggest a need to re-evaluate methods of tracking PA participation by older adults.
Published
2017-12-01
How to Cite
Barkley, S. A., & Herrmann, S. D. (2017). Seasonal Variation of Physical Activity in Community-Living vs. Residential-Dwelling Older Adults. Californian Journal of Health Promotion, 15(3), 37-47. https://doi.org/10.32398/cjhp.v15i3.1907