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Publication Detail
| Physical Activity in Aging: Changes in Patterns and Their Relationships to Health and Function |
| Journal Article 2001 |
This journal article is part of a Special Issue supplement of Journals of Gerontology entitled "Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Quality of Life in Older Adults."
Author: Loretta DiPietro
Journals of Gerontology: SERIES A, 2001, Vol. 56A (Special Series II): 13-22
Abstract Sedentary behavior is an important risk factor for chronic disease morbidity and mortality in aging. However, there is a limited amount of information on the type and amount of physical activity needed to promote optimal health and function in older people. The purpose of this review is to describe the changes in patterns of habitual physical activity in aging and the relationships of these changes to physical function and selected chronic diseases. We undertook a literature review of large population-based studies of physical activity in older people, and there is encouraging evidence that moderate levels of physical activity may provide protection from certain chronic diseases. Additionally, substantial health effects can be accrued independent of the fitness effects achieved through sustained vigorous activity. Thus, regular participation (i.e., 30 minutes/day on most days fo the week) in activities of moderate intensity (such as walking, climbing stairs, biking, or yard work/gardening), which increase accumulated daily energy expenditure and maintain muscular strength, but may not be of sufficient intensity for improving fitness, should be encouraged in older adults. Public policy should focus on ways of increasing volitional and lifestyle activities in older people, as well as on increasing the availability and accessibility of senior and community center programs for promoting physical activity throughout the life span.
Other articles in the supplement:
Physical Activity and Parameters of Aging: A Physiological Perspective Physical Activity and Quality of Life in Older Adults Interventions to Promote Physical Activity by Older Adults Nutrition and Health Promotion in Older Adults
Nutrition and Quality of Life in Older Adults Decreased Food Intake with Aging
Dietary Intake, Dietary Patterns, and Changes with Age: An Epidemiological Perspective |
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