1. Dancing among older Latinos: Interweaving health and culture
- Author
-
Susan Aguiñaga, Guilherme M. Balbim, Isabela G. Marques, David X. Marquez, Michelle Jaldin, and Priscilla G. Vásquez
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Gerontology ,Formative assessment ,History ,Sociology and Political Science ,Dance ,Intervention (counseling) ,Multitude ,Cultural studies ,Psychological intervention ,Cognition ,Cognitive skill ,Psychology - Abstract
Physical activity (PA) has been linked to health across a multitude of mental and physical outcomes. Given that leisure time PA is mostly related to favorable health outcomes, strategies to increase leisure time PA among Latinos are warranted. Dance is a form of PA that can also be adjusted to different populations, ages and physical limitations, and is a main commonality across the large and diverse Latino population. To date, evidence on the health benefits of dance for older Latino adults are limited. This paper describes the development and health benefits, in traditional qualitative and quantitative studies, of a Latin dance program that aimed to increase PA, improve cognition, and build community in older Latino adults residing in a major US city. First, we present the formative work, followed by a short description of the BAILAMOS™ dance program. Subsequently, we briefly discuss the progression of trials with BAILAMOS as the intervention and the main results. It appears that regular Latin dancing can increase overall PA and influence aspects of physical and cognitive functioning. This finding highlights the importance of creating PA interventions that incorporate opinions and feedback from the community the intervention targets, are culturally relevant, that take place in older Latinos’ communities, and that are linguistically appropriate and led by bilingual and bicultural staff.
- Published
- 2021