Tai Chi – an exercise option for elderly adults with many benefits.
Recent studies from Tufts University have shown that the traditional Chinese martial art Tai Chi, known in western countries for its soft, flowing movements, is not only a good exercise option for older adults and the frail, but can benefit heart health and osteoarthritis. 
A report from the Tufts University Program in Evidence-Based Complimentary and Alternative Medicine reports that “studies suggest that Tai Chi is a safe exercise, even for frail elders, and may be beneficial to various aspects of cardiovascular health. It requires no specialized equipment, is relatively inexpensive and can be taught/learned in a group setting. Tai Chi appears to elicit a cardiovascular response equivalent to that associated with moderate intensity exercise, and as such meets the American College of Sports Medicine, American Heart Association, and Centers for Disease Control recommendations for daily performance of low- to moderate-intensity activities.”
And in the November issue of Arthritis Care & Research, a journal of the American College of Rheumatology, researchers reported “that patients over 65 years of age with knee osteoarthritis (OA) who engage in regular Tai Chi exercise improve physical function and experience less pain. Tai Chi (Chuan) is a traditional style of Chinese martial arts that features slow, rhythmic movements to induce mental relaxation and enhance balance, strength, flexibility, and self-efficacy.”
If you would like to learn more about Tai Chi, or even give it a try, you can check out the website of the International Taoist Tai Chi Society – Atlantic Region. Here you will find information on classes all over Nova Scotia.
Great article on Tai Chi. I’d like to mention there are other opportunities and approaches to learning Tai Chi in the Atlantic region. Myself and others teach specific health based Tai Chi programs such as Tai Chi for Arthritis, recognized by Arthritis Foundations around the world. These programs are designed to optimizes health benefits for specfic health conditions. I teach throughout Cape Breton Island. There is also Janice Webber based in Halifax who offers these programs.
Michael Milburn
Cape Breton Tai Chi
Sydney, NS
Not sure if you have seen this but the Center for Disease Control determined that the level of intensity for osteo-arthritis was greater for African Americans and Hispanics, despite reduced frequency amongst these groups. The report was published in the May issue of Preventing Chronic Disease.