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Tai Chi for Older People Reduces Falls
The information provided on this page comes from The National Institute on Aging and National Institute of Health.
Tai Chi, a martial arts form that enhances balance and body
awareness through slow, graceful, and precise body movements, can
significantly cut the risk of falls among older people and may be
beneficial in maintaining gains made by people age 70 and older
who undergo other types of balance and strength training. The
news comes in two reports appearing in the May 1996 issue of the
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
The two studies are the first involving Tai Chi to be reported by
scientists in a special frailty reduction program sponsored by
the National Institute on Aging (NIA).
In the first study, Steven L. Wolf, Ph.D., and colleagues at the
Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Ga., found that
older people taking part in a 15-week Tai Chi program reduced
their risk of falling by 47.5 percent. A second study, by Leslie
Wolfson, M.D., and colleagues at the University of Connecticut
Health Center, Farmington, found that several interventions to
improve balance and strength among older people were effective.
These improvements, particularly in strength, were preserved over
a 6-month period while participants did Tai Chi exercises.
The projects are among several in the NIA's Frailty and Injuries:
Cooperative Studies of Intervention Techniques, or FICSIT,
initiative, launched in 1990 to improve physical function in old
age.
Research from these and other FICSIT trials has demonstrated the
benefits of strength training for older people and the value and
cost-effectiveness of targeted, fall prevention programs for the
elderly. It is estimated that each year falls are responsible for
costs of over $12 billion in the U.S., and the costs due to
physical frailty are much higher.
The news on Tai Chi is a reminder that relatively "low
tech" approaches should not be overlooked in the search for
ways to prevent disability and maintain physical performance in
late life. "The FICSIT studies have shown that a range of
techniques, from the most sophisticated medical interventions to
more 'low tech' methods, can help older people avoid frailty and
falling," says Chhanda Dutta, Ph.D., Director of
Musculoskeletal Research in the NIA's Geriatrics Program.
"We must make sure that we look at every approach,
especially relatively inexpensive ones like Tai Chi," says
Dutta. "People can do this at home and with friends once
they have had the proper training."
The Wolf study included 200 participants age 70 and older. The
participants were divided into groups for Tai Chi, computerized
balance training, and education. In addition to 15 weekly
sessions in which they progressed to more complex forms of Tai
Chi, the participants were asked to practice at home at least 15
minutes, twice daily. Another group received balance training
using a computer-operated balance platform in which participants
tried to improve control of their body sway under increasingly
difficult conditions. The education group was asked to not change
any of its current exercise regimens, and took part in weekly
meetings on a variety of topics with a nurse gerontologist.
Wolf's group compared several factors before and after the
interventions, and found improvements in certain key areas. The
most notable change involved the reduction in the rate of falling
for the Tai Chi group. The groups receiving computerized balance
platform training did not have significantly lower rates of
falling. The Tai Chi participants also took more deliberate steps
and decreased their walking speed slightly compared to the other
groups. Fear of falling also was reduced for the Tai Chi group.
After the intervention, only 8 percent of the Tai Chi group said
they feared falling, compared with 23 percent before they had the
training.
"The Tai Chi group seemed to have more confidence,"
says Wolf, noting that "they had an increased sense of being
able to do all that they would like to do." Wolf notes that
almost half of the Tai Chi participants chose to continue meeting
informally after the study was finished.
The Connecticut FICSIT site used sophisticated techniques for
balance and strength training. Some 110 participants, averaging
age 80, received training for 3 months. They were divided into
four groups: one group received balance training in 45-minute
sessions three times per week, including a computerized balance
platform (of a different type than the one used in the Wolf
study) as well as low-tech balance exercises; another took part
in resistance training and weight lifting three times a week to
improve strength; a third group did both balance and strength
training, and a fourth "education" group participated
in sessions on fall prevention and stress management. Everyone in
the study took part in weekly Tai Chi classes for 6 months
following the intensive training period.
The people in the study were evaluated before undergoing any
training, immediately after the training, and after a 6-month
follow-up Tai Chi program. The interventions of major focus in
the study -- intensive balance and strength training -- produced
marked effects. Participants had a 25 to 50 percent improvement
in three different measures of balance after completing balance
training, while strength training resulted in a 17 percent
improvement in strength. Some of the gains immediately following
the balance and strength training were lost after 6 months of the
Tai Chi follow-up program. However, the participants tested
significantly higher than they had before the interventions
began.
Without a comparable group who did not receive Tai Chi training
after exercise training, it is difficult to know for certain
whether the Tai Chi contributed to maintaining gains in strength
and balance. Wolfson noted that study participants might have
done even better at the end of the maintenance phase had they
continued the more intensive balance and strength training, but
he also suggested that Tai Chi might be further studied as a less
intensive way to hold onto the benefits of prior strength and
balance training.
The NIA, part of the National Institutes of Health, leads the
Federal effort conducting and supporting research on the aging
process and the diseases and disabilities that accompany
advancing age. The Institute's program focuses on biomedical,
clinical, and social and behavioral research, and supports the
Claude D. Pepper Older American Independence Centers at medical
centers across the U.S., whose research is aimed at maintaining
healthy function well into old age.
Reprinted From Tripod - See Other Tai Chi Links and Information
