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Promoting Physical Activity with

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Women are less active than men but the gap closes with increased age ... Dressing and undressing (King's College 2006) (in private households and care homes) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Promoting Physical Activity with


1
  • Promoting Physical Activity with
  • Older People
  • A Guide to Leading Edge Practice
  • Seminar programme - Spring 2008

2
  • Themes and content of the programme
  • Update on evidence
  • BHF NC Guidelines on older people and physical
    activity
  • Active for Later Life resource
  • Policy and partnerships

3
  • Why Leading Edge Practice ?
  • In the last few years older people and physical
    activity has begun to move up the agenda but ..
  • We need to move from innovation and short termism
    to sustained activities and opportunities by
    implementing effective interventions and
    programmes

4
Physical activity and older people
  • Update on evidence
  • Overall summary
  • New areas to highlight (and some old !)
  • Key messages
  • making use of specific and targeted evidence
  • The benefits extending into later, later life
  • www.bhfactive.org

5
Physical activity levels among older people
  • Physical inactivity declines with age
  • Women are less active than men but the gap closes
    with increased age
  • Ethnic minority elders are less active
  • Data available at www.bhfactive.org.uk

6
The benefits of physical activity
The benefits of physical activity for older people
  • Increasing/overwhelming evidence in relation to
  • Disease prevention and management, psychosocial
    benefits and complications of immobility
  • Maintaining independence, improving the quality
    of life, and successful ageing.
  • Opportunities for significant savings to health
    and social care services DOH (2005)
  • Benefits can be achieved by healthy older
  • people as well as the frail and very old.

7
Prevention and management of disease
The benefits of physical activity for older people
  • Coronary heart disease
  • Stroke
  • Increased blood pressure
  • Late onset (Type 2) diabetes
  • Osteoporosis
  • Colon and other cancers
  • Cognitive impairment
  • Weight control
  • Reduction in accidental falls
  • Effects apparent even among those taking up
  • activity at a later age.

8
Selecting the evidence for target groups and
partners
  • Psychological (mental) health and well being
  • Cognitive functioning and dementia
  • Energetics
  • People over 85
  • Older Men and gender equity

9
1. Psychological benefits
The benefits of physical activity for older people
  • Reduction in stress and anxiety
  • Reduction in depression, enhancement of mood
  • Improvement in overall psychological well-being
  • Improvements in self-esteem and self-worth
  • Reduction in isolation and loneliness
  • Effects apparent even among those taking up
  • activity at a later age.

10
Improving psychological health
  • Is a priority for older people and a growing need
  • Different measures e.g. loneliness, isolation,
    well being, self esteem and self worth, anxiety
    and depression
  • In touch with friends and family, getting out of
    the house, letting off steam, being in the open
    air, achieving something
  • Evidence of effect as strong amongst older people
    as young people
  • Physical activity as effective as medication ?
  • Outcomes most reported by older people and most
    easily captured

11
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12
Psychological health why is this important ?
  • UK Enquiry into Mental Health of Older People
    (Age Concern and NIMH 2006)
  • NICE draft Guidance (2008)
  • High prevalence amongst older population and
    always under reported
  • Addressing National Service Frameworks and other
    Gaps
  • Increase in GP referrals reported

13
2. Cognitive functioning and dementia
  • Physical activity associated with
  • Improvement in both the function and structure of
    the brain
  • Reduced risk of cognitive impairment
  • Increasing evidence of links with stroke and
    diabetes (vascular dementia)
  • Taking its place among preventable/lifestyle
    diseases
  • (NICE Guidance 2006)

14
Cognitive decline and dementias
  • Benefits to both people with dementia and their
    carers (family or professional)
  • Maintenance of function and independence
  • Dementia may be accompanied by significant
    depression and increased risk of falls
  • Quality of life the greatest challenge
  • Applicable to a range of services, home based,
    day care, residential services and nursing care

15
People with dementia Why is this
important ?
  • Currently 7000,000 in UK set to rise to 1,000,000
    in 2020
  • 2/3 live at home but 65 of residential beds
    and rising
  • Significant impact on carers and families
  • Dementia is also a young persons disease
  • Dementia strategy in England/Scotland this year
    (2008) and NICE guidance already published
  • The costs of dementia already outstrip CHD, Stoke
    and Cancers together (17 B)

16
3. Energetics Physical activity as a personal
resource
  • The capacity to live life to the full e.g. engage
    in life, hobbies, grandchildren
  • Energy as building capacity and reserve
  • Improvements to quality and quantity of sleep
    well documented
  • Improvements in appetite and digestion
  • A message for the older person

17
Physical Activity as a resource
  • Provides energy, dynamism and vitality to enjoy
    life and to succeed.
  • Enriches peoples lives.
  • Conditions the body to enable people to
    participate more effectively in sport/dance.
  • Widens peoples perceptions of what they can do
    in their lives.

18
4. People over the age of 85
  • The new and fastest growing generation
  • Small proportion in nursing and care.
  • Most live at home
  • Increased prevalence of disease and frailty
  • Do we have low expectations of them ?
  • Fear and skills factor

19
Older, older people
  • The benefits
  • Protective effects (e.g. CHD, Stroke, Falls are
    increasingly evident in to the later years)
  • Prevalence of poor mental health and depression
    (always under-reported)
  • Management of Long Term Conditions (all the other
    benefits as well)
  • Maintenance of function and independent living
    key motives

20
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21
Functional decline and frailty
How active are older people?
  • (Spirduso, 1995)

22
Too frail to benefit?
  • Dose response curve
  • The lower the baseline level of physical
    activity, the greater the health benefit
    associated with an increase in physical activity.
    Exercise can be adapted for any medical condition
  • (Haskell 1994)

23
Inactivity the consequencesProportion of women
aged 70 able to walk for different periods of
time and lengths of walk,
100
1/4 of a mile or more
80
30 min
60
15,
5,
40

20
0
70-74
75-79
80
80
70-74
75-79
Age
24
Why ? evidence linked to Independence and
problems encountered with physical tasks
  • Walking 200 metres
  • Climbing 12 stairs
  • Picking up items from the floor
  • Getting in and out of a chair
  • Getting in and out of bed
  • Dressing and undressing
  • (Kings College 2006)
  • (in private households and care homes)

25
Activities of Daily Living.
  • Wash hair comfortably?
  • 20 women 14 of men 50 do not have
    sufficient shoulder flexibility
  • Confident of getting out of a chair without using
    arms ?
  • 25 women 7 men aged 70 74 do not have
    sufficient leg strength
  • Ease of stair use?
  • 47 women aged 70 74 do not have sufficient leg
    power
  • Walk comfortably at a 20 minute a mile pace?
  • 35 men and 80 women aged 70 74 do not have
    sufficient aerobic capacity

26
Reducing the complications of immobility
The benefits of physical activity for older people
  • Deep vein thrombosis
  • Gravitational oedema
  • Intermittent claudication
  • Contractures
  • Pressure sores
  • Faecal impaction
  • Effects apparent even among those taking up
  • activity at a later age. Movement can be
  • passive and aided.

27
Strength training 85
  • Programmes involving 2-3 sessions per
  • week with loads greater than 65 of 1RM (1RM
  • the one-repetition maximum, or the load that can
  • be lifted once only) have produced significant
  • improvements in muscle strength in older people.
  • Older people have similar gains in relative
    muscle
  • strength to those observed in young adults.
  • (Fiatarone et al. High-intensity strength
    training in nonagenarians. Effects on
    skeletal muscle. Journal of the American Medical
    Association 1990 263 3029-3034).

28
5 Older men and gender equity
  • An inequality in health ?
  • Men die younger
  • At most ages PA levels are higher, but gap closes
    with increased age
  • Different disease patterns e.g. CHD, prostate
    cancer
  • But men do not use health services why ?

29
Older men
  • Glasgow Silver Programme only 14 of participants
    were men
  • Are services designed or appropriate for men ?
  • e.g. developing attractive activities
  • Developing male roles within services
  • Increasing volunteer opportunities
  • NHS Gender Equity
  • (BHF NC 2007)

30
Evidence update - summary
  • CMO Report - At Least Five a Day (2005)
  • CD available as download
  • BHF NC fact sheets
  • Target to priority groups and partners
  • Smarter Use linked to people, policies and
    outcomes
  • Further evidence available
  • Section 1 of the Active for Later Life Resource
  • www.bhactive.org.uk
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