Publication | Closed Access
Progressive and imaginal relaxation training for elderly persons with subjective anxiety.
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Citations
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References
1992
Year
PsychotherapyAgingMental HealthGeriatric MedicineRelaxation InventoryKinesiologyElderly PersonsMind-body MedicineApplied PhysiologyCognitive TherapyHealth SciencesPsychiatryGeriatricsRehabilitationPersonal FunctioningPhysical TherapySubjective AnxietyImaginal Relaxation ProceduresImaginal Relaxation TrainingMind-body InterventionGeriatric AssessmentMedicineAnxiety Disorders
Elders exposed to either progressive or imaginal relaxation procedures reported significant relaxation effects and showed improvement on measures of personal functioning. The results of the Physical Assessment Scale of the Relaxation Inventory indicated that relaxation responses were acquired within and across sessions. Large, consistent changes in relaxation occurred in all 4 sessions. The Symptom Checklist-90-R, which measures self-reported personal adjustment, showed significant positive changes following relaxation training and at 1-month follow-up. Elders who imagined muscle tension release profited as much as those engaged in actual muscle tension-release activities. This finding is of importance for older adults who may experience physical limitations that contraindicate muscle-tension-release procedures.
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