Health-related quality of life and sickness absence in community nursing home employees: randomized controlled trial of physical exercise.

Autores
Categoría Estudio primario
RevistaOccupational medicine (Oxford, England)
Año 2005
Cargando información sobre las referencias

BACKGROUND:

It is a common belief that physical exercise at the workplace decreases subjective health complaints and reduces sickness absence, but this is not supported by previous randomized studies.

AIMS:

To evaluate the effectiveness of physical exercise at the workplace.

METHODS:

One hundred and twenty-nine employees in a community-based nursing home for the elderly were randomized into physical exercise or control groups. A weekly exercise class consisting of light aerobic exercise, muscle strengthening and stretching was held for a 6-month period. The control group was told to continue their ordinary activity. The main outcome measures were aerobic fitness (UKK, walking test), health-related quality of life (COOP/WONCA) and sickness absence. Blinded assessments were carried out at baseline and following the 6-month intervention. Complete sickness absence data were collected from a community register for two comparable 7-month periods.

RESULTS:

The average number of exercise sessions was 12 (0-26). Self-reported physical activity increased in the intervention group compared with the control group (P < 0.01). Aerobic fitness improved in both groups (P < 0.01). Mean sickness absence increased from 6.8 to 15.6 days in the exercise group and from 10.4 to 14.5 in the control group. No differences between groups were found for aerobic fitness, health-related quality of life or sickness absence.

CONCLUSION:

The intervention neither improved health-related quality of life nor reduced sickness absence.
Epistemonikos ID: 341fe987c588528e87717e4e665951fa4e85649a
First added on: Dec 24, 2012