Skip to main content
  • Faculty & Staff Kintranet

Utility

  • Apply
  • Directory
  • For Employers
  • Giving
  • Spirit Store

Site Search

Home

Main navigation

  • Academics
  • Research
  • Admissions & Financial Aid
  • Student Services
  • News & Events
  • Alumni
  • About
  • Apply
  • Directory
  • For Employers
  • Giving
  • Spirit Store
  • Kintranet
Labs & Centers
Student looking into a microscope

Main navigation

  • Labs & Centers
    • Assessing Traumatic Head Injury with Neurocognitive Approaches (ATHINA) Laboratory
    • Behavioral Biomechanics Laboratory
    • Brain Behavior Laboratory
    • Center for Inclusive Mobility Environments (CIME)
    • Center for Race & Ethnicity in Sport
    • Center for Sport & Sustainability
    • Center for Sport Marketing Research
    • Center for Sports Venues & Real Estate Development
    • Child Movement, Activity, & Developmental Health Laboratory
    • Childhood Disparities Research Laboratory
    • Comparative Orthopaedic Rehabilitation Laboratory
    • Environment & Policy Laboratory
    • Exercise & Health Behavior In Oncology Laboratory
    • Exercise Oncology Laboratory
    • Human Bioenergetics Laboratory
    • Healthy Aging After Cancer Laboratory
    • Human Performance & Sport Science Center
    • Integrative Molecular Genetics Laboratory
    • KineOmics Laboratory
    • Lifestyle, Exercise, & Arteries Laboratory
    • Locomotion Research Laboratory
    • Michigan Center for Sport & Social Responsibility
    • Michigan Center for Sport Management
    • Michigan Performance Research Laboratory
    • Motivation Laboratory
    • Motor & Visual Development Laboratory
    • Motor Control Laboratory
    • Muscle Biology Laboratory
    • Musculoskeletal Biomechanics & Imaging Laboratory
    • Neuromuscular Physiology of Human Movement Laboratory
    • NeuroTrauma Research Laboratory
    • Orthopedic Rehabilitation & Biomechanics Laboratory
    • Performance, Rehabilitation & Injury Management through Exercise (PRIME) Laboratory
    • Physical Activity & Health Laboratory
    • Rehabilitation Biomechanics Laboratory
    • Roybal Center for Promoting Adherence to Behavior Change & Enhancing Cognitive Function
    • Substrate Metabolism Laboratory
    • Translational Physical Activity Laboratory
    • U-M Concussion Center
  • Research Areas
  • Faculty Interests
  • Undergraduate Research (UROP)
Back to Motivation Lab

Comparative Effectiveness of Brief Strength and Balance Exercises and Standard Home-Based Group Exercise for Primary Care Patients with Mobility Disability

Based at Penn State University
Principal Investigator: Christopher Sciamanna (Penn State University)
PCORI contract: PCORI-HA-2021C3-25041
PCORI Portfolio
ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT05227105
Cover of Preventative Medicine Reports
2021 preliminary study demonstrating the feasibility of brief strength training prescribed for older adults by primary care physicians

 

One in four older adults, the fastest growing demographic group in the US, reports serious difficulty walking or climbing stairs. Older adults note that these walking difficulties “deprives you of your identity” and “affects my day to day life… I can’t do very much work on my own.” Walking difficulties impair people’s quality of life more than depression, anxiety, or pain. Walking difficulties also increase the chances of future disability, death, and healthcare costs. Though strength training improves walking ability, fewer than one in five older adults do strength training enough to benefit. What is unknown is how to create a strength training program that improves the ability of older adults to walk and do other things they need and want to do and that older adults are willing to do.

One approach to designing a strength training program that has not been tried before is to make them shorter. In 2020, the project team set out to design a short strength training program that older adults could do at home that would improve their physical function and that they would consistently do. The program was called FAST (Functional Activity Strength Training) and, to make it more effective, the team set specific goals for how many additional repetitions each person should be able to do over 12 weeks. These goals were then mentioned repeatedly, and feedback was provided about how well people made progress toward these goals.

In the first study of FAST (FAST-1), 24 healthy older adults performed 30 seconds of squats and push-ups each day but received no personal supervision. Over six months, they performed the exercises on 73 percent of days, which led to large increases in the number of push-ups and squats they were able to do. In the second study of FAST (FAST-2), the team randomly assigned 97 older adults who had trouble walking, and those assigned to do 30 seconds each of chair stands and steps onto a stepper each day improved their ability to stand up from a chair and stand on one leg more than those who did not do the exercises.

In this project, the team plans to test the impact of FAST, its brief home-based strength training program which includes performance goal setting, to a program for home (BAND TOGETHER) that is similar to one offered by Silver Sneakers, available online to millions of older adults, and includes strength, balance, and aerobic exercises. The team hypothesizes that the brief program (FAST) will improve leg function better than the standard program (BAND TOGETHER), by encouraging older adults to be more consistent with using it and to try harder when they do.

This study will enroll 520 primary care patients who are at least 65 years of age and randomly assign them to have access to 12 months of daily FAST or three‐times weekly BAND TOGETHER. Each program will be delivered via the internet and each patient will receive about 30 minutes per month of personal support. The study will enroll patients who have trouble walking, have access to the internet, can provide informed consent, and receive permission from their doctor. The study is designed to see whether patients who have access to FAST, after 12 months, have better walking ability, balance, and leg strength and can do their normal daily activities more easily and fall less often than patients who have access to BAND TOGETHER.

To help us understand how best to perform the study, as well as how best to share the results, the study team assembled a group of stakeholders that includes patients, primary care providers, fitness center directors, and people who work for insurance, public health, and senior services organizations. The team will bring those stakeholders together each year and consult them regularly to help make difficult decisions as they arise--decisions that may impact each group of stakeholders differently. Two patient partners will work with investigators to supervise the group of stakeholders and organize their feedback, structured as a public comment period, to help the research team make decisions that take into account the perspectives of all of the key groups of stakeholders involved in improving the physical function of older adults.

Faculty

David Conroy, PhD, FACSM, FSBM

,
[email protected]
UM logo
School of Kinesiology
830 N. University Ave.
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1048
CAA HEP logo CAATE logo AKA logo

Menu

  • Intranet
  • Contact Us
  • Job Postings
  • Privacy Notice
  • Provide Website Feedback

Social

  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • X/Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Flickr

© 2026 The Regents of the University of Michigan

Site produced by Michigan Creative, a unit of the Office of the Vice President for Communications