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Thomas R. Wójcicki

Researcher at Bellarmine University

Publications -  59
Citations -  9728

Thomas R. Wójcicki is an academic researcher from Bellarmine University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Physical fitness & Cardiorespiratory fitness. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 58 publications receiving 8574 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas R. Wójcicki include University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign & University of Louisville.

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Physical activity and quality of life in older adults: an 18-month panel analysis.

TL;DR: The findings from this study suggest the relationship between physical activity and global QOL in older adults may be mediated by more proximal modifiable outcomes that can be targeted in physical activity programs and interventions.
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Differential exercise effects on quality of life and health-related quality of life in older adults: a randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: Walking appears to enhance the mental aspect of HRQOL and global QOL when compared to a non-aerobic intervention and the patterns of change in QOL andHRQOL were not linear over time.
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Effects of a DVD-delivered exercise intervention on physical function in older adults with multiple sclerosis: A pilot randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: This pilot randomized controlled trial suggests that older adults with MS are receptive to an exercise program via DVD, and the program results in modest but potentially important improvements in function and physical activity.
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Physical activity, function, and quality of life: design and methods of the FlexToBa trial.

TL;DR: The Flexibility, Toning, and Balance (FlexToBa) Trial is a two-armed randomized controlled trial which will contrast the effects of a DVD-delivered, home-based, physical activity intervention and a Healthy Aging attention control condition on physical activity, functional performance, functional limitations, and quality of life in low active, older adults.
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Trajectories of change in self-esteem in older adults: Exercise intervention effects

TL;DR: Results supported the position that across both groups, domain-level self-worth was dependent upon sub-domain-level esteem change and greater improvements were observed in the flexibility-toning-balance group, in terms of perceived strength and attractiveness esteem, compared to the walking group.