Journal Article10.1097/00006842-200205000-00010
An exercise program for women who are caring for relatives with dementia.
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TL;DR: Women who were older, less depressed, and more anxious at baseline showed better program retention, and lower baseline depression was associated with better exercise adherence, as well as increased knowledge of the benefits of exercise and increased motivational readiness for exercise at 12 months.
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Abstract: Objective This study describes factors related to retention and adherence to an exercise program for women caregivers. Methods One hundred sedentary women (average age = 62 years) caring for relatives with dementia were randomly assigned to an exercise program or an attention control (nutrition education) condition. Participants in the exercise condition received 12 months of home-based exercise counseling to achieve at least four exercise sessions per week, for at least 30 minutes per session. Adherence was tracked through monthly exercise logs, validated in a subsample by ambulatory heart rate and motion monitors. Participants also completed a psychosocial questionnaire battery at baseline and 12 months after randomization. Results Participants achieved a 12-month average exercise adherence rate of 74% (ie, three exercise sessions per week) with an average of 35 minutes per session. At 12 months, the exercise condition demonstrated increased knowledge of the benefits of exercise and increased motivational readiness for exercise compared with the nutrition education condition. Both groups significantly improved in perceived stress, burden, and depression from baseline to posttest. Women who were older, less depressed, and more anxious at baseline showed better program retention, and lower baseline depression was associated with better exercise adherence. Conclusions This study demonstrates the feasibility and success of delivering home-based health promotion counseling for improving physical activity levels in a highly stressed and burdened population. Given the independent risk factors of caregiving and physical inactivity on mortality, programs to improve healthful behaviors are needed to preserve the health of caregivers as they undertake this important familial and societal role.
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Citations
Predicting personal self-care in informal caregivers
TL;DR: Personal self-care was most strongly associated with emotional well-being, pain, perceived stress, and general health and the relevance of study findings to strengthening family caregiver programs is discussed.
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Acceptability of psychosocial interventions for dementia caregivers: a systematic review
TL;DR: Preliminary evidence to support the acceptability of psychosocial interventions for dementia caregivers is found, but available supporting evidence is limited and there is currently no adequate information from these studies indicating that theacceptability has received enough attention from researchers.
Rural family caregivers and health behaviors: results from an epidemiologic survey.
Cynthia M. Castro,Abby C. King,Robyn A. Housemann,Stephen J. Bacak,Kathleen M. McMullen,Ross C. Brownson +5 more
TL;DR: Caregivers reported lower fruit intake, more walking for exercise, and more provider advice about stress, fruits, and vegetables than noncaregivers; however, health providers seemed more attentive to caregivers regarding nutrition and stress.
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An Intervention to Improve Physical Function and Caregiver Perceptions in Family Caregivers of Persons With Heart Failure
Rebecca A. Gary,Sandra B. Dunbar,Melinda Higgins,Brittany Butts,Elizabeth J. Corwin,Kenneth Hepburn,Javed Butler,Andrew H. Miller +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a randomized controlled trial was conducted to determine whether a 12-week home-based aerobic and resistance exercise program would improve physical function and caregiving perceptions among family caregivers (FCGs) of persons with heart failure.
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