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Journal Article

Citation

Madigan M, Rosenblatt NJ, Grabiner MD. Curr. Obes. Rep. 2014; 2014(May): s13679-014-0106-y.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Current Medicine Group)

DOI

10.1007/s13679-014-0106-y

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The growth of the worldwide population of older adults presents significant challenges, many inter-related, that range from the health of individuals to the health of national economies. In the US, more than one-third of older adults may be obese, a condition that may independently increase the risk for mobility impairment, fall-related injury and, possibly, costs of post-injury treatment and care. The effectiveness of conventional exercise-based fall prevention programs is significant but smaller than both the annual rate of falling of older adults and rate of growth of this population, who are at greatest risk for injurious falls. The anthropometric and functional consequences of obesity may impose limitations on the ability to perform compensatory stepping responses following large postural disturbances. The focus of this paper is the potential of task-specific training to improve compensatory stepping responses and reduce falls by obese people given the individual-specific anthropometric and functional consequences of obesity.


Language: en

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