Director, Allied Health Research Unit Professor Terry Haines and Melanie Farlie |
Congratulations Monash Health physiotherapist and Monash
University PhD candidate Melanie Farlie, who was awarded Best Student Oral
Presentation at the 7th Biennial Australian and New Zealand Falls
Prevention Conference in Melbourne last week.
A Maxwell King PhD scholar at Monash University, Melanie is developing
and validating a scale to rate the intensity of exercises that challenge
balance in older adults.
“Currently, there is no validated scale available to measure
the intensity of balance exercise training, unlike strength training and
aerobic exercise which have well established validated intensity measures,”
said Melanie.
“The implication of this is
that clinicians do not have an accurate measure of how hard patients are
working, and patients are unable to reliably self-monitor how hard they are working
during balance exercise training.”
Melanie said that a validated measure
of balance exercise intensity could potentially improve exercise prescription
efficacy—informing how hard people need to exercise to improve their balance
ability without undue risk.
“We don’t know if people need to
work to the level that they are just short of falling over to improve their
balance ability (currently the American College of Sports Medicine
guidelines),” said Melanie.
“Once a validated measure of
balance exercise intensity has been developed we can start trials of older
adults working at low, medium and high balance intensity levels to determine
the optimal training intensity and the optimal frequency and duration of
exercise programs, to both improve balance and prevent falls.”
In further good news, Melanie was awarded a Lions John
Cockayne Memorial Fellowship Trust Fund Travelling Fellowship last week, which
will enable her to attend the World Confederate of Physical Therapy (WCPT) congress
in Cape Town, Africa in July 2017.
Melanie will present her PhD findings at the WCPT congress,
and also bring back the most up-to-date practice information to the
Physiotherapy and broader rehabilitation teams at Monash Health.
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