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Training Improves Mental Abilities Of Older AdultsNovember 13, 2002 BETHESDA, MD (NIH) -- Training
sessions for 2 hours a week for 5 weeks improved the memory, concentration and problem
solving skills of healthy independent adults 65 years and older who participated in
the nation's largest study of cognitive training. The training not only improved
participants' cognitive abilities, but the improvement persisted for 2 years after the
training, according to initial findings from the multi-site trial of Advanced Cognitive
Training for Independent and Vital Elderly, or ACTIVE. "The trial was highly
successful in showing that we can, at least in the laboratory, improve certain thinking
and reasoning abilities in older people," says Richard M. Suzman, Ph.D.,
Associate Director for the Behavioral and Social Research Program at the National
Institute on Aging (NIA). "The findings here were powerful and very specific.
Although they did not appear to make any real change in the actual, daily activities of
the participants, I think we can build on these results to see how training ultimately
might be applied to tasks that older people do everyday, such as using medication or
handling finances. This intervention research, aimed at helping healthy older people
maintain cognitive status as they age, is an increasingly high priority." The study, published in
the November 13, 2002, issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association,
was funded by the NIA and the National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR), two
components of the National Institutes of Health at the Department of Health and Human
Services. According to Dr. Patricia
A. Grady, Director of the NINR, "The ACTIVE trial provides encouraging preliminary
findings that we may be able to conserve or improve some cognitive abilities in older
adults not currently having problems in these areas. How this training may affect those
who later experience cognitive deficits is a tantalizing question waiting to be
answered." The study looked at
several types of cognitive training and then assessed, in the laboratory and in "real
world" measures, whether the training was effective. At the outset, certified
trainers conducted 10 sessions of 60 to 75 minutes over a 5 to 6 week period. The 2,802
participants were divided into four groups -- three groups that received either memory
training, reasoning training, or speed of processing training, and a fourth group that
received no training. The three types of training were chosen because they showed the most
promise in small laboratory studies and were related to tasks of daily living such as
telephone use, shopping, food preparation, housekeeping, laundry, transportation,
medication use, and personal finances. For all three groups, the training focused on
developing strategies as well as providing exercises using these new strategies. All
participants were assessed prior to training, immediately after training, and again 1 and
2 years later. Those in the
memory-training group were taught strategies for remembering word lists and sequences of
items, text material, and main ideas and details of stories. Participants in the reasoning
group were taught how to solve problems that follow patterns. Such strategies can be used
in tasks such as reading a bus schedule or filling out an order sheet. Speed of processing
training focused on the ability to identify and locate visual information quickly for use
in tasks such as looking up a phone number, finding information on medicine bottles, and
responding appropriately to traffic signs. Immediately following the
5-week training period, 87 percent of participants in speed training, 74 percent of
participants in reasoning training, and 26 percent of participants in memory training
demonstrated reliable improvement on their respective cognitive ability. The training
effects continued through 24 months, particularly for the participants who received
"booster" training. "The improvements in memory, problem solving, and
concentration following training were sizeable," noted Karlene Ball, Ph.D., of the
University of Alabama at Birmingham, the study's corresponding author. "These roughly
counteract the degree of cognitive decline that we would expect to see over a 7- to 14-
year period among older people without dementia." Source: www.intellihealth.com
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NANAY Inc. is supported by Florida Older Americans Act, Alliance for Aging for Miami-Dade and Monroe Counties, Florida Department of Transportation, Miami-Dade Alliance for Human Services, Dept of Health and Human Services, Miami-Dade County Office of Community and Economic Development, North Miami CDBG, Association of Asian Pacific Community Health Organizations (AAPCHO), National Asian Women's Health Organization (NAWHO), AETNA Foundation and United Way (Miami-Dade Reg. # 161126)
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