Self-Efficacy and the Maintenance of Exercise: A Quantitative Study Among Rural Older Adults
Bryant O’Leary, Tasha Shaffer, Dawn Tarabochia, Brianna Routh

TL;DR
This study shows that personal preferences strongly influence exercise self-efficacy in rural older adults, helping maintain physical activity.
Contribution
The study highlights individual preferences as a novel key factor in predicting self-efficacy for exercise in rural older adults.
Findings
Individual preferences are significantly associated with higher self-efficacy scores (p<.001).
Enjoyment, belief in importance, and guilt when inactive are key factors shaping exercise behaviors.
Integrating exercise into daily routines supports long-term physical activity in rural older adults.
Abstract
Despite the well-documented health benefits of physical activity, research shows increased sedentary behaviors among older adults (Fanning, Nicklas, & Rejeski, 2022; Leung, Sum, & Yang, 2021). A common approach to understanding exercise behaviors in high-risk populations, such as rural older adults, is to examine self-efficacy. Self-efficacy is a strong predictor of an individual’s confidence in their ability to engage in exercise (Szczuka et al., 2019). This study aimed to evaluate whether older adults with more exercise facilitators also report higher self-efficacy scores. Data were collected through a survey designed to explore self-efficacy and facilitators related to physical activity. The survey questions were developed to incorporate a previously tested exercise self-efficacy measure along with a list of facilitators and barriers previously identified in research (Bethancourt et…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysical Activity and Health · Cardiovascular and exercise physiology · Mobile Health and mHealth Applications
