Physical activity of older Australians measured by pedometry

Aim: To established population norms for pedometer determined step counts in older Australians. Methods: A representative sample of 684 participants over the age of 55 years wore a pedometer for a week in Newcastle, Australia. Results: Response rate was 32%. Median daily step count was 8605 in those...

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Main Authors: Ewald, B., Duke, Janine, Thakkinstian, A., Attia, J., Smith, W.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42730
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author Ewald, B.
Duke, Janine
Thakkinstian, A.
Attia, J.
Smith, W.
author_facet Ewald, B.
Duke, Janine
Thakkinstian, A.
Attia, J.
Smith, W.
author_sort Ewald, B.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Aim: To established population norms for pedometer determined step counts in older Australians. Methods: A representative sample of 684 participants over the age of 55 years wore a pedometer for a week in Newcastle, Australia. Results: Response rate was 32%. Median daily step count was 8605 in those aged 55–59 years declining to 3778 in those over 80 years old. The proportion who reached 8000 steps per day was 62% in those 55–59 years and 12% in those over 80 years. Daily step counts were highest on Thursdays and Fridays and least on Sundays. Weekend days had on average 620 less steps than weekdays. After adjusting for age, there was a negative association of step count with body mass index >30, and with a history of arthritis but no significant association with other demographic variables. Conclusion: Pedometry is feasible in an elderly sample, and research involving pedometers must take days of the week into account.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:13:11Z
publishDate 2009
publisher Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-427302017-09-13T15:58:24Z Physical activity of older Australians measured by pedometry Ewald, B. Duke, Janine Thakkinstian, A. Attia, J. Smith, W. Aim: To established population norms for pedometer determined step counts in older Australians. Methods: A representative sample of 684 participants over the age of 55 years wore a pedometer for a week in Newcastle, Australia. Results: Response rate was 32%. Median daily step count was 8605 in those aged 55–59 years declining to 3778 in those over 80 years old. The proportion who reached 8000 steps per day was 62% in those 55–59 years and 12% in those over 80 years. Daily step counts were highest on Thursdays and Fridays and least on Sundays. Weekend days had on average 620 less steps than weekdays. After adjusting for age, there was a negative association of step count with body mass index >30, and with a history of arthritis but no significant association with other demographic variables. Conclusion: Pedometry is feasible in an elderly sample, and research involving pedometers must take days of the week into account. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42730 10.1111/j.1741-6612.2009.00372.x Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia restricted
spellingShingle Ewald, B.
Duke, Janine
Thakkinstian, A.
Attia, J.
Smith, W.
Physical activity of older Australians measured by pedometry
title Physical activity of older Australians measured by pedometry
title_full Physical activity of older Australians measured by pedometry
title_fullStr Physical activity of older Australians measured by pedometry
title_full_unstemmed Physical activity of older Australians measured by pedometry
title_short Physical activity of older Australians measured by pedometry
title_sort physical activity of older australians measured by pedometry
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42730