The association between social support and physical activity in older adults: a systematic review
Victoria University · Federation University · +1 more institution
Abstract
The promotion of active and healthy ageing is becoming increasingly important as the population ages. Physical activity (PA) significantly reduces all-cause mortality and contributes to the prevention of many chronic illnesses. However, the proportion of people globally who are active enough to gain these health benefits is low and decreases with age. Social support (SS) is a social determinant of health that may improve PA in older adults, but the association has not been systematically reviewed. This review had three aims: 1) Systematically review and summarise studies examining the association between SS, or loneliness, and PA in older adults; 2) clarify if specific types of SS are positively associated with PA; and 3) investigate whether the association between SS and PA differs between PA domains.
Quantitative studies examining a relationship between SS, or loneliness, and PA levels in healthy, older adults over 60 were identified using MEDLINE, PSYCInfo, SportDiscus, CINAHL and PubMed, and through reference lists of included studies. Quality of these studies was rated.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 35.73
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 111
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Loneliness
- CINAHL
- PsycINFO
- Gerontology
- Medicine
- Association (psychology)
- Social support
- Psychological intervention
- Good health and well-being