Group Exercise Boosts Physical and Mental Health for Older Adults

Summary: Older adults who participated in group exercise programs showed improvements in sleep quality, muscle strength and flexibility, balance, and coordination. They also reported improvements in self-confidence.

Source: University of Missouri

Stephen Ball has dedicated his career to improving the health of older Missourians through exercise. In 2005, he launched the University of Missouri’s ‘Stay Strong Stay Healthy’ strength training program, which has reached more than 20,000 older adults since its inception.

For years, Ball has heard anecdotally about the physical and mental health benefits older adults have experienced from the eight-week strength training program—now he has scientific proof.

According to a recent research study, adults over age 60 who participated in the group exercise program experienced improved muscle strength and flexibility, balance and coordination, sleep quality and overall self-confidence to increase physical activity, all while reducing the risk of falling and the expensive medical bills that may follow.

“This program embodies what MU is all about as a land-grant university,” said Ball, a professor in the MU School of Health Professions and a Missouri state fitness specialist with MU Extension.

“We give undergraduates valuable hands-on experience in teaching exercise, conduct life-changing research in the lab and then with our partnerships through MU Extension, we go out in rural communities and implement the research to improve the health of everyday Missourians.”

In the study, Ball collaborated with Missouri Orthopedic Institute to evaluate the effectiveness of the ‘Stay Strong Stay Healthy’ strength training program in a group setting among adults over the age of 60. Participants in the instructor-led courses, which last one hour and are held twice a week for eight weeks, are taught how to safely complete strength training exercises, including squats and bicep curls.

By completing various baseline tests for strength, balance and flexibility before and after the program, the study found participants improved not only their physical health outcomes but also their self-confidence in their ability to exercise, which increased their physical activity in their daily lives and reduced the risk of falls, which is a major concern for aging adults.

“We help older adults maintain their independence as they age and reduce their risk of falling, which has huge financial implications as well as health implications,” Ball said.

“We keep hearing from participants that in addition to feeling stronger, healthier and more active, another major reason they enjoy the group classes is the social aspect of making friends with others their age and engaging with community members in a stress-free environment.”

Ball earned a William T. Kemper Fellowship from MU in 2012 for his undergraduate teaching and extension work. With more than a dozen peer-reviewed studies highlighting the efficacy of the ‘Stay Strong Stay Healthy’ program since 2005, Ball said the strength training program has been approved by the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services as an evidence-based program that can be implemented throughout the state.

This shows a group of people exercising
According to a recent research study, adults over age 60 who participated in the group exercise program experienced improved muscle strength and flexibility, balance and coordination, sleep quality and overall self-confidence to increase physical activity, all while reducing the risk of falling and the expensive medical bills that may follow. Image is in the public domain

The program is now implemented by MU Extension faculty in Missouri, and through MU-trained facilitators in Oklahoma, Tennessee, Kansas, North Carolina and Nevada.

By building out even more peer-reviewed, evidence-based research findings on the physical and mental health benefits of the program, Ball’s body of literature may soon help the program receive national recognition as an evidence-based falls prevention program.

“I have heard from participants that the program saved their life, and it is very rewarding to be serving our community members and improving their health,” Ball said.

“We have undergraduate students at MU that help instruct classes, we have graduate students that help with research and our MU Extension regional faculty implement the program across the state serving all 114 counties in Missouri, so it is a real team effort meeting all three missions of a land grant university.”

About this exercise and health research news

Author: Press Office
Source: University of Missouri
Contact: Press Office – University of Missouri
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Closed access.
Efficacy of an 8-Week Resistance Training Program in Older Adults: A Randomized Controlled Trial” by Breanne S. Baker et al. Journal of Aging and Physical Activity


Abstract

Efficacy of an 8-Week Resistance Training Program in Older Adults: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Older adults are challenged with aging-related declines in skeletal muscle mass and function. Although exercise interventions of longer duration typically yield larger changes, shorter-term interventions may kick-start positive effects, allowing participants to begin engaging in more activity.

This study aimed to determine whether 8 weeks of a resistance training program (Stay Strong, Stay Healthy [SSSH]) improved dynamic muscle strength, balance, flexibility, and sleep. Inactive adults aged ≥60 years were randomized into SSSH (n = 15), walking (WALK; n = 17), or control (CON; n = 14) groups. The SSSH and WALK groups met 2 times per week for 60 min.

The participants completed pre/post general health, activity, and sleep questionnaires; DXA scans; and functional tasks. One-way repeated-measures multivariate analysis of variance was used to determine interactions and decomposed using repeated-measures analysis of variance.

SSSH improved sit-to-stand performance, back scratch distance, and sleep quality and reported more auxiliary physical activity than WALK or CON (p < .05). Resistance training interventions in sedentary older adults can improve physical function and encourage additional activity in 8 weeks.

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