Search results for "DICS"

showing 10 items of 2714 documents

Physical activity, fitness, and all-cause mortality: An 18-year follow-up among old people

2016

Background: Little is known about change in physical activity (PA) and its relationship to all-cause mortality among old people. There is even less information about the association between PA, fitness, and all-cause mortality among people aged 80 years and above. The objective is to investigate persistence and change in PA over 5 years as a predictor of all-cause mortality, and fitness as a mediator of this association, among people aged 80 and 85 years at the beginning of an 18-year mortality follow-up period. Methods: Using Evergreen Project data (started in 1989), 4 study groups were formed according to self-reported changes in PA level, over a 5-year period (starting in 1989–1990 and e…

GerontologyPhysical activityphysical activityPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and Rehabilitationlcsh:GV557-1198.99503 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMedicineOrthopedics and Sports Medicine030212 general & internal medicineFunctional abilitylcsh:Sports medicineta315lcsh:Sportsold peoplebusiness.industryFollow up studiesta3141ta3142030229 sport sciencesfitnessRegular paperall-cause mortalitylcsh:RC1200-1245businessAll cause mortalityJournal of Sport and Health Science
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Masters athletes: Age is just a number

2019

GerontologyPhysiologyPhysiology (medical)Masters athletesOrthopedics and Sports MedicinePhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationPsychologyMovement & Sport Sciences - Science & Motricité
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Why no support for an association between active commuting to school and weight status in the literature?

2009

Published version of an article from the journal:Journal of physical activity & health

GerontologySchoolsBody WeightTransportationWalkingBicyclingPeer reviewVDP::Medical disciplines: 700::Health sciences: 800::Nutrition: 811HumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicinePeriodicals as TopicAssociation (psychology)PsychologyExerciseWeight status
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Handgrip strength and health outcomes: Umbrella review of systematic reviews with meta-analyses of observational studies

2020

Highlights • We carried out an umbrella review of systematic reviews with meta-analyses of observational studies on handgrip strength and all health outcomes. • Three outcomes (lower all-cause mortality, lower cardiovascular mortality, and lower risk of disability) were found to have highly suggestive evidence. • One outcome (chair rise performance over time) was found to have suggestive evidence. • Five outcomes (walking speed, inability to balance, hospital admissions, cardiac death, and mortality in those with chronic kidney disease) were found to have weak evidence.

GerontologyUmbrella review.*Meta-analysisHealth Status*Handgrip strengthReview0302 clinical medicineCause of DeathCredibilityMedicineOrthopedics and Sports Medicine030212 general & internal medicinePostural BalanceAged 80 and overHand StrengthHospitalizationObservational Studies as TopicSystematic reviewCardiovascular DiseasesMeta-analysis*Umbrella reviewRC1200-1245LocomotionSportsRiskHealth outcomePhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationHealth outcomesHandgrip strength03 medical and health sciencesStrength of evidenceUmbrella reviewBiasMeta-Analysis as TopicIntervention (counseling)HumansMeta-analysiRenal Insufficiency ChronicCardiovascular mortalityAgedProbabilitybusiness.industry030229 sport sciencesHealth outcomes*Health outcomesWalking SpeedMeta-analysisSample SizeGV557-1198.995Sports medicineObservational studybusinessSystematic Reviews as Topic
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High-risk individuals’ perspective on risk of Type 2 Diabetes and physical activity in the prevention of diabetes. A qualitative study

2012

Gerontologybusiness.industryDiabetes mellitusPerspective (graphical)Physical activityMedicinePhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationOrthopedics and Sports MedicineType 2 diabetesbusinessmedicine.diseaseQualitative researchJournal of Science and Medicine in Sport
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The effect of advice by health care professionals on increasing physical activity of older people

2003

The aim of this study was to investigate whether advice by health care professionals is associated with increased exercise activity in older people. As part of the Evergreen follow-up study, self-report data on exercise related advice were collected in 1996 and physical activity in 1988 and 1996 among 611 non-institutional people initially aged 65-84 years. Logistic regression analyses were used to study the association of recollection of having received exercise counseling with increased activity. Of all the subjects, 92% reported having been in contact with health care professionals during the follow-up period, and 58% of them recalled having been advised to exercise. Those men and women …

Gerontologybusiness.industryMEDLINEPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationPhysical exerciseOdds ratioLogistic regressionConfidence intervalHealth careMedicineOrthopedics and Sports MedicineCalisthenicsHealth educationbusinessScandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports
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The continuity of physical activity - a retrospective and prospective study among older people

2000

This study investigated the continuity of life-span physical activity by examining the predictors of the maintenance of a high level of physical activity over 8 years among subjects aged 65-84 years at the baseline, in 1988, in Jyvaskyla, Finland. Age, education, marital status and chronic conditions and past physical activity were studied at the baseline. In men and women, self-reported competitive sport participation from as early as 10-19 years of age was a significant predictor for maintaining activity in old age. Also women's participation in recreational sports at the age of 40-64 years predicted activity. We concluded that past physical activity is strongly connected to maintaining a…

Gerontologybusiness.industryPhysical fitnessPhysical activityPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationRetrospective cohort studyPhysical exerciseOdds ratioMedicineMarital statusOrthopedics and Sports MedicinebusinessProspective cohort studyOlder peopleScandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports
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The association between cycling to school and being overweight in Rotterdam (The Netherlands) and Kristiansand (Norway)

2011

Active transportation is a behavior that might contribute to energy balance. However, no clear association between active commuting to school and weight status has been reported in the international literature. Also, new studies indicate that cycling to school might have a greater health potential than walking to school. The purpose of the present study is to assess the potential association between cycling to school and weight status in two European cities, Rotterdam and Kristiansand, where cycling to school remains common. Data from two studies, ENDORSE (Rotterdam) and Youth in Balance (Kristiansand), were used including, respectively, 1361 and 1197 adolescents with mean ages of 14.1 and …

Gerontologybusiness.industryeducationPoison controlHuman factors and ergonomicsPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationOdds ratioOverweightmedicine.diseaseObesityOccupational safety and healthInjury preventionmedicineOrthopedics and Sports Medicinemedicine.symptombusinesshuman activitiesBody mass indexDemographyScandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports
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Repeatability of lifetime exercise reporting

2001

The purpose of the study was to determine the reliability of lifetime exercise data obtained through a structured interview. Interviews were conducted in 1992-1993 and repeated in 1997 in 150 monozygotic male twins, aged 35-69 years, from the population-based Finnish Twin Cohort. Exercise mode, frequency, duration, intensity and period of participation were solicited for each regularly performed exercise from 12 years of age to the present. Questions related to the most common exercise mode reported in the initial interview were repeated in all subjects and the entire exercise interview was repeated in a subgroup of 38 subjects. The repeatability was highest for exercise years and mean hour…

Gerontologyeducation.field_of_studymedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryPopulationPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationRetrospective cohort study030229 sport sciencesRepeatability03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineStructured interviewCohortExercise intensityPhysical therapyMedicineOrthopedics and Sports Medicinebusinesseducation030217 neurology & neurosurgeryKappaScandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports
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Reversal of age-associated frailty by controlled physical exercise: The pre-clinical and clinical evidences.

2019

Demographic aging is one of the most serious challenges facing our society. Although we live longer, we do not live better because it is considered that approximately 16–20% of our life is spent in late-life morbidity. Older people have the greatest risk of developing frailty increasing the risk of presenting various adverse health events such as low quality of life, disability, hospitalization and even death. Frail men and women over 65 years old have lower muscle quality and muscle mass and higher percentage of body fat than non-frail people of the same age. In this review we will address the main physiological changes in the muscular and nervous system associated to aging. More specifica…

Gerontologylcsh:R5-920business.industryPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationPhysical exerciseMuscle massQuality of life (healthcare)Intervention (counseling)MedicineOxidative capacityOrthopedics and Sports MedicineDemographic Aginglcsh:Medicine (General)businessOlder peopleSports medicine and health science
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