American Journal of Men's Health (Dec 2007)

Effect of Telephone Exercise Counseling on Frailty in Older Veterans: Project LIFE

  • Matthew J. Peterson PhD,
  • Richard Sloane MS, MPH,
  • Harvey Jay Cohen MD,
  • Gail M. Crowley MSN, RN, ANP,
  • Carl F. Pieper DrPH,
  • Miriam C. Morey PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1557988307306153
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1

Abstract

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This study sought to determine if telephone exercise counseling attenuates frailty in older, male veterans through increased levels of physical activity. Eighty-one elderly, male veterans (age = 78.4 ± 4.9 years) randomized to intervention ( n = 39) or combined control groups ( n = 42) completed baseline and 6-month follow-up measures of gait velocity, 6-min walk, chair stands, body mass index, and physical activity. Adapting the Fried frailty model, deficits in one or more of these outcomes indicated frailty. The intervention group had a 6-month decrease of 18% in the proportion of frail to not frail participants, whereas the control groups had no change in proportions (Fisher's p = .08). Frail participants had a mean 6-month decrease in physical activity levels of 124 kilocalories/week, whereas the not frail group increased by 619 kilocalories/week ( p = .07). There was a clinically meaningful change in frailty status with intensive, telephone exercise counseling. Improvement in frailty status was likely due to improvement in functional limitations.