Rapid Transition to Telehealth Group Exercise and Functional Assessments in Response to COVID-19.
Abstract
Exercise is critical for health maintenance in late life. The COVID-19 shelter in
place and social distancing orders resulted in wide-scale interruptions of exercise
therapies, placing older adults at risk for the consequences of decreased mobilization.
The purpose of this paper is to describe rapid transition of the Gerofit facility-based
group exercise program to telehealth delivery. This Gerofit-to-Home (GTH) program
continued with group-based synchronous exercise classes that ranged from 1 to 24 Veterans
per class and 1 to 9 classes offered per week in the different locations. Three hundred
and eight of 1149 (27%) Veterans active in the Gerofit facility-based programs made
the transition to the telehealth delivered classes. Participants' physical performance
testing continued remotely as scheduled with comparisons between most recent facility-based
and remote testing suggesting that participants retained physical function. Detailed
protocols for remote physical performance testing and sample exercise routines are
described. Translation to remote delivery of exercise programs for older adults could
mitigate negative health effects.
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Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23677Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1177/2333721420980313Publication Info
Jennings, Stephen C; Manning, Kenneth M; Bettger, Janet Prvu; Hall, Katherine M; Pearson,
Megan; Mateas, Catalin; ... Morey, Miriam C (2020). Rapid Transition to Telehealth Group Exercise and Functional Assessments in Response
to COVID-19. Gerontology & geriatric medicine, 6. pp. 2333721420980313. 10.1177/2333721420980313. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23677.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Janet Prvu Bettger
Adjunct Associate in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
Dr. Bettger’s research is dedicated to establishing real world evidence aimed to improve
health care quality and policies that reduce the burden of disease and disability.
As a health services researcher and implementation scientist, her research extends
from observational studies to randomized and pragmatic trials. She was the Founding
Director of Duke Roybal Center for Translational Research in the Behavioral and Social
Sciences of Aging and the Founding Director of Undergraduate
Miriam C. Morey
Professor Emeritus of Medicine
The general focus of Dr. Morey's work is exercise and aging. All of her research examines
how physical activity, exercise training, or physical fitness influence the physical
functioning and/or pyschosocial quality of life of older adults. She directs a supervised
hospital-based program for older adults, which is used to examine longitudinally the
effects of exercise training on the musculoskeletal, articular, and cardiorespiratory
systems. Furthermore, she has a number of studies that examine h
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