UI Postgraduate College

EFFECTS OF AEROBIC DANCE AND PEDOMETER-BASED WALK ON CARDIOVASCULAR PARAMETERS, BODY COMPOSITION AND FUNCTIONAL ABILITY OF BAPTIST ELDERLY WOMEN IN THE IBADAN METROPOLIS

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author DUYILEMI, Atolani Shakirat
dc.date.accessioned 2024-04-25T13:58:55Z
dc.date.available 2024-04-25T13:58:55Z
dc.date.issued 2023-06
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2056
dc.description.abstract Health-promoting activities are undertaken by some orthodox churches in the Ibadan metropolis, including the Baptist Church, which has a Department dedicated to the healthcare of its members, particularly the elderly. Research has shown that elderly people experience physiological decline in terms of cardiovascular parameters, body composition, and functional ability, making exercise crucial to mitigating the burden of age-related illness. Previous studies focused largely on conventional exercise, with little attention paid to Aerobic Dance (AD) and Pedometer-based Walk (PBW). This study, therefore, determined the effects of AD and PBW on the Cardiovascular Parameters –CP [Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP), Diastolic Blood Pressure (DBP) and Mean Arterial Blood Pressure (MABP), Body Composition –BC [Fat Mass (FM), FatFree Mass (FFM), Body Mass Index (BMI)] and Functional Ability –FA [Chair SitReach (CSR), Arm Curl (AC) and Chair Sit and Stand (CSS)] of Baptist elderly women in the Ibadan metropolis. The moderating effect of of elderliness was also examined. The study was anchored to the Programmed Theory of Ageing, while pretest-posttest control group quasi-experimental design with a 3x2 factorial matrix was adopted. The simple random sampling technique was used to select three out of the 25 associations in Ibadan Baptist Conference. Simple random sampling was adopted to select a church from each of the selected associations. Seventy elderly women of age 55 years and above were purposively selected from the sampled churches. Treatment lasted for 12 weeks. Data were analysed using multivariate analysis of covariance at 0.05 level of significance. The participants’ age was 61.33±5.88 years. Treatment had a significant main effect on cardiovascular parameters. On MABP (F(2; 64) = 5.36, η2 =.16), the participants exposed to PBW had the lowest mean score (88.268); on SBP (F(2; 64) = 7.22, η2=.20), the participants exposed to PBW had the lowest mean score (122.41); and on DBP (F(2; 64) = 3.59, η2=.11), the participants exposed to PBW had the lowest mean (71.54). The treatment was significant on two of the body composition parameters - FM (F(2; 64) = 19.77, η2=.41). The participants exposed to AD had the lowest mean score (28.85) and BMI (F(2; 64) = 23.06, η2=.45). The participants exposed to AD had the lowest mean score (26.71). The treatment was also significant on functional ability parameters. On CSR (F(2; 64) =16.98, η2=.37), the participants exposed to AD had the highest mean score (4.85); on CSS (F(2; 64) = 43.79, η2=.602), the participants exposed to AD had the highest mean score (20.72); and on AC (F(2; 64) = 25.30, η2=.47), the participants exposed to AD had the highest mean score (29.04). Stage of elderliness had a significant main effect only on AC (F(1; 65) = 3.97, η2=.06). The two-way interaction effects of treatment and stage of elderliness were not significant. Aerobic dance and pedometer-based walk improved the cardiovascular parameters, body composition, and functional ability among the Baptist elderly women in the Ibadan metropolis. Therefore, aerobic dance and pedometer-based walk should be adopted to mitigate the burden of age-related illness of Baptist elderly women. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Aerobic dance, Pedometer-based walk, Baptist Elderly women, Functional ability. en_US
dc.title EFFECTS OF AEROBIC DANCE AND PEDOMETER-BASED WALK ON CARDIOVASCULAR PARAMETERS, BODY COMPOSITION AND FUNCTIONAL ABILITY OF BAPTIST ELDERLY WOMEN IN THE IBADAN METROPOLIS en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account

Statistics