Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Self-Selected Walking Speed Is Predictive of Daily Ambulatory Activity in Older Adults

2015; Human Kinetics; Volume: 24; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1123/japa.2015-0104

ISSN

1543-267X

Autores

Addie Middleton, George Fulk, Michael W. Beets, Troy M. Herter, Stacy L. Fritz,

Tópico(s)

Physical Activity and Health

Resumo

Daily ambulatory activity is associated with health and functional status in older adults; however, assessment requires multiple days of activity monitoring. The objective of this study was to determine the relative capabilities of self-selected walking speed (SSWS), maximal walking speed (MWS), and walking speed reserve (WSR) to provide insight into daily ambulatory activity (steps per day) in community-dwelling older adults. Sixty-seven older adults completed testing and activity monitoring (age 80.39 [6.73] years). SSWS (R2 = .51), MWS (R2 = .35), and WSR calculated as a ratio (R2 = .06) were significant predictors of daily ambulatory activity in unadjusted linear regression. Cutpoints for participants achieving < 8,000 steps/day were identified for SSWS (≤ 0.97 m/s, 44.2% sensitivity, 95.7% specificity, 10.28 +LR, 0.58 -LR) and MWS (≤ 1.39 m/s, 60.5% sensitivity, 78.3% specificity, 2.79 +LR, 0.50 -LR). SSWS may be a feasible proxy for assessing and monitoring daily ambulatory activity in older adults.

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