For Seniors: Effective Recreation for Preventing Care Needs—Have Fun While Staying Healthy
For the physical and mental well-being of older adults, rehabilitation that involves moving the arms and legs is ideal.
However, simply following a set rehabilitation routine doesn’t always lead to motivation.
In this article, we introduce enjoyable recreational activities that contribute to arm and leg rehabilitation for older adults.
From group activities that everyone can get excited about to options you can focus on individually, you’ll surely find fun ways to work on functional improvement.
Choose according to each person’s physical and mental condition.
We hope you find this helpful.
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- Recreation Activities Effective for Long-Term Care Prevention for Seniors
[For Seniors] Effective for Preventing the Need for Care! Fun Recreational Activities (311–320)
Balloon Volleyball × Brain-Training Word-Guessing Quiz

It’s an activity that adds a quiz element to balloon volleyball so you can move your body and brain at the same time.
Attach pieces of paper with letters written on them to the balloons, keep the balloons floating, and observe them to read the letters.
It’s a game that tests various abilities: moving your hands so you don’t let the balloon drop, dynamic visual acuity to read letters stuck on an unstable balloon, and the thinking skills to rearrange the letters you’ve read into a word.
Rather than everyone competing for the right answer individually, it also seems like it would be exciting to have everyone cooperate to complete the word together.
Balloon volleyball stick whacking

When you fill a balloon with air, it moves in a light, floaty way, right? Let’s try playing volleyball with one of those floaty balloons by hitting it with sticks.
Divide into two teams and have the older adults sit while holding a stick.
When the balloon comes to you, use the stick to return it like in volleyball.
The key is to use longer sticks.
The slow-moving balloon volleyball will surely get older adults excited.
Once everyone gets used to it, try using two balloons, and so on.
Balloon Relay

Here’s a fun balloon relay that’s great for sports days and other events.
Place an inflated balloon on top of a baton and run a relay.
While holding the baton with the balloon on it, walk carefully so you don’t drop the balloon and pass the baton to the next person.
The balloon wobbles lightly on top of the baton, so even though it looks easy, it’s actually a tricky game.
It’s even more fun if you split into several teams.
Because you’ll be calling out to and helping each other, it can spark communication.
Even if the balloon falls, don’t panic—just keep at it and enjoy!
Balloon Baseball Game

It’s a game where you swing a stick vigorously to send a balloon flying as far as possible.
What you aim the balloon at also matters—there are various rule sets, such as aiming for a target or trying to clear obstacles.
It’s a game that can train many parts of the body in the instant of the swing: grip strength on the stick, awareness of transferring power to the balloon, and twisting movements of the body.
To make the balloon fly in the intended direction, it’s important to keep your eyes on it, so it can also help improve concentration.
Fly away, koi-nobori!

Let me introduce a recreation activity using a koinobori (carp streamer) called “Fly Away, Koinobori.” You will need one double-spread newspaper page, a pen, and tape.
First, fold the double-spread newspaper in half, then fold down about 10 centimeters along the top edge.
Roll the paper into a tube so that the folded section is on the inside.
Tape it to prevent it from unrolling.
With the koinobori shape complete, use a pen to draw designs and patterns to create your original koinobori.
To use it, launch it like a paper airplane.
You can adapt the activity in many ways: compete for flight distance, flight time, or aim at targets.
While having fun, it also provides exercise and training from the shoulders to the fingertips, making it recommended for senior care facilities.



