Abstract

BackgroundDespite the known health benefits of physical activity, the number of older adults exercising regularly remains low in many countries. There is a demand for public open space interventions that can safely train balance, muscular strength, and cardiovascular fitness. In this participatory design study, older adults and young adults were to create their own stepping stones configurations. We provided them with six stepping stones, and examined the gap widths that each group of participants created and how they used the configurations.ResultsThe created absolute gap distances by the older adults were smaller than those of the younger adults. Yet, the amount of challenge (in terms of the created gap widths relative to a person’s estimated stepping capability) did not significantly differ between the young and older adults. Furthermore, both groups created non-standardized stepping stone configurations in which the number of different gap widths did not significantly differ between the young and older adults. Interestingly, while using their personalized design, older adults made significantly more gap crossings than younger adults over a given timespan. This finding tentatively suggests that personalized design invites physical activity in older adults.ConclusionThe present study demonstrated that older adults are not more conservative in designing their own stepping stone configuration than young adults. Especially in light of the public health concern to increase physical activity in seniors, this is a promising outcome. However, field tests are needed to establish whether the older adults’ stepping stones designs also invite physical activity in their daily environment.

Highlights

  • More people than ever are living long lives (World Health Organization [WHO], 2018)

  • Despite the known health benefits of physical activity (World Health Organization [WHO], 2011), the number of adults exercising regularly remains low in many countries (Hallal et al, 2012; World Health Organization [WHO], 2014)

  • The present study examined whether older adults and young adults differ in the stepping stones configurations they create for themselves, focusing on both the distances between the stones and the variety of gap widths

Read more

Summary

Introduction

More people than ever are living long lives (World Health Organization [WHO], 2018). When we look at older age groups, movements become slower, muscle strength decreases, eyesight reduces, and there is an increased risk of falls (Osoba et al, 2019). Despite the known health benefits of physical activity (World Health Organization [WHO], 2011), the number of (older) adults exercising regularly remains low in many countries (Hallal et al, 2012; World Health Organization [WHO], 2014) This means that increasing physical activity in seniors is a public health concern. Over the last decades outdoor exercise areas have been frequently implemented to safely train balance, muscular strength, and cardiovascular fitness (Arena et al, 2017; Kershaw et al, 2017). There is a demand for public open space interventions that can safely train balance, muscular strength, and cardiovascular fitness. In this participatory design study, older adults and young adults were to create their own stepping stones configurations. We provided them with six stepping stones, and examined the gap widths that each group of participants created and how they used the configurations

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call