Effects of a Physical Activity Intervention on Perceived Stress, Fatigue, and Depressive Symptoms in Older Adults: A Secondary Analysis of the LIFE Study. Smail EJ, et al, J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 2025.
- Proposé le : 12/11/2025 07:07:14
- Par : Bot
- Avec la version du site : v2021_01_12
- Revu par :
- Mettre votre nom d'utilisateur
- Mettre votre nom d'utilisateur
Résumé et points clés
Methods: Secondary data analysis of the Lifestyle Interventions and Independence for Elders (LIFE) Study, a single-blinded, parallel randomized controlled trial conducted between February 2010 and December 2013. The PA intervention included walking, strength exercises, balance training, and flexibility activities. The HE intervention consisted of workshops on health topics for older adults. The main outcomes for our analysis included standardized scales with participants self-reporting their stress, fatigue, and depressive symptoms at baseline, 12 months, and 24 months postrandomization.
Results: Results from the 1 495 participants (Mage = 78 years; 66% female in both groups) showed no significant between-group differences in perceived stress, fatigue, or depressive symptom scores over time. However, in both intervention groups, participants with worse baseline scores showed a steady improvement in symptom scores over time compared to the remaining participants, who showed some decline (p value for interaction < .05).
Conclusions: Among mobility-impaired individuals, a long-duration, group-based PA intervention had no more impact on stress, fatigue, or depressive symptoms compared to a group-based HE intervention. However, participants with higher symptoms at baseline showed improvement over time in both intervention groups.
Références de l'article
Discussion
- Cette section peut être éditée par les relecteurs, les rédacteurs, les modérateurs et les administrateurs. Elle regroupe l'ensemble des échanges autours de la référence ci-dessus présentée.
- Référez-vous à cette page pour connaître le rôle des utilisateurs et pour participer à la discussion.
- Il n'y a, pour l'instant, aucune discussion en cours.