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Relationship of Physical Activity to Self-Care Agency and Physical Condition Among Older Adults in a Rural Area

Authors :
Kazuoki Inoue
Daeho Park
Chika Tanimura
Hiromi Matsumoto
Hiroshi Hagino
Junko Yoshimura
Yasuko Tokushima
Source :
J. Yoshimura, C. Tanimura, H. Matsumoto, et al. Relationship of Physical Activity to Self-Care Agency and Physical Condition Among Older Adults in a Rural Area. Yonago Acta Medica. 2021, 64(1), 18-29. doi:10.33160/yam.2021.02.004, Yonago Acta Med
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Tottori University Faculty of Medicine, 2021.

Abstract

[Background] Maintaining physical activity is important for older adults. “Self-care agency” is the ability to perform self-care, which is defined as people following their own will, managing themselves, and maintaining activities. We investigated the relationship among physical activity and self-care agency, demographic factors and physical condition in older adults. [Methods] Self-care agency was assessed by using the Self-Care Agency Questionnaire developed for Japanese patients with chronic diseases. Among 175 older adults aged 65 years or older living in a rural area, responses from 83 who performed physical activities were analyzed. Correspondence analysis was conducted to characterize demographic factors and self-care agency. [Results] A higher proportion of women than men were engaged in physical activity. Irrespective of age and sex, many of the participants performed stretching exercises, walking, radio exercises, TV exercises, and participated in community circles. Participants who engaged in physical activities had significantly higher self-care agency scores than inactive participants. Among the active participants, the self-care agency score was significantly higher for women than men (P = .04) and was also significantly higher for participants aged ≥ 75 years compared to those aged < 75 years. Individuals with a high self-care agency tended to participate in local programs and perform brief physical activities at home. [Conclusion] Physically active older adults demonstrated high self-care agency. Their activities were easily carried out in their daily lives, with activities varying by age and sex. Support from community health experts is needed to promote suitable physical activity among older adults tailored for age and sex, especially among older adults who have low self-care agency.

Details

ISSN :
13468049
Volume :
64
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Yonago Acta Medica
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....108620047e8d71a50bde9cd51fc9c55d