Abstract
Background: Aquatic exercise programs can enhance health and improve functional fitness in older people, while there is limited evidence about the efficacy of aquatic-exercise programs on improving well-being and quality of life. Aim: The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of a supervised water fitness program on subjective well-being in older women. Methods: The study group included 166 active older women (> 65 years), divided into water-based (WFG) and land-based (CG) training groups. They filled out 3 questionnaires to assess their amount of physical activity (IPAQ), subjective well-being (PANAS) and mental and physical health status (SF-12). Results: Results showed that subjective well-being, physical activity level, perceived mental and physical status had higher values in the WFG compared to CG. Conclusions: We found that older women practicing water fitness tend to have a better subjective physical and mental well-being than those who exercise in a land-based context.
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Del Bianco, M., Lovecchio, N., Pirazzi, A., Gatti, A., Pellino, V. C., Cucco, L., … Vandoni, M. (2023). Self-reported physical activity level, emotions, feelings and self-perception of older active women: is the water-based exercise a better enhancer of psychophysical condition? Sport Sciences for Health, 19(4), 1311–1317. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11332-023-01094-4
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