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Recreation Activities Effective for Long-Term Care Prevention for Seniors

This article introduces recommended recreational activities for preventing the need for long-term care.

We’ve gathered a wide range of options, including exercises and games that move the hands and feet, as well as quizzes that engage the mind.

Doing recreational activities is effective for physical rehabilitation and dementia prevention.

You can also expect benefits like increased appetite and improved sleep quality as your activity level rises.

It’s also a great opportunity to interact with other older adults who are participating.

Please use this article as a reference and enjoyably put it to use for care prevention.

[For Older Adults] Recreational Activities Effective for Preventing the Need for Care (121–130)

Winter Song Exercises

[Singing Exercise] Winter Recreation · Elderly · Health Exercise · Seniors · Easy · While Seated in a Chair · Simple
Winter Song Exercises

Sing-along activities are offered in many senior and welfare facilities.

Singing helps relieve stress and, because it moves the mouth, also works as an oral exercise.

Moreover, combining songs with simple exercises—song-exercise routines—stimulates the cerebrum, activates the brain, and can help prevent dementia.

If the exercises use songs people like, even seniors who feel reluctant to move might think, “Maybe I’ll give it a try.” Seasonal songs, such as winter-themed ones, can also help seniors feel the season as they exercise.

Disposable Chopstick Picking Game

Recreation for seniors: super easy, can be done while seated—Chopstick-Grabbing Game #SeniorRecreation #ActivitiesForSeniors #CareRecreation #SeatedActivities
Disposable Chopstick Picking Game

It’s a game where you twist a bundle of disposable chopsticks into a standing tower and then pull out one chopstick at a time; whoever topples the tower loses.

You’re tested on fine motor skills, like judging which chopsticks affect the balance and how to pull them out so the force doesn’t transfer through the structure.

The careful yet quick pulling motion is also crucial for maintaining balance, so keep your focus and sense of speed sharp.

It’s also interesting that as the number of remaining sticks decreases, the ability to judge the overall balance becomes even more important.

A game where you flip over plastic bottle caps placed in an egg carton

[No-Crowding Solo Activity] Supervised by a Recreation Care Worker! Simple Indoor Handmade Game Video for Seniors: 'A Game Where You Flip Bottle Caps in an Egg Carton Using Chopsticks☆'
A game where you flip over plastic bottle caps placed in an egg carton

Using just a single disposable chopstick, flip the plastic bottle caps inside an egg carton.

If you’re deft, it can even look like you’re cooking takoyaki.

The trick is actually all about where you insert the chopstick and how you move it.

By rubbing the chopstick against the cap, the pressure makes the bottle cap spin around.

Because you’re using a tool and performing fine, precise movements, the stimulation travels from the hand to the brain, so you can also expect brain-training benefits.

If you time it, it becomes competitive, making it fun both solo and in small groups.

Brain training that sharpens your reflexes

5 brain-training activities for recreation or exercise that require no equipment, make you laugh and have fun, and improve your reflexes
Brain training that sharpens your reflexes

It’s a game that trains your reflexes by imitating claps so that your timing matches the model person’s clapping as closely as possible.

While getting a firm grasp of the clapping rhythm is key to enjoying the game, focusing too much on the rhythm can make you fall for tricks.

The sequence of observing the model’s hands and reflecting that in your own movements tests both your concentration and reflexes.

Adding changes in rhythm or variations in clapping midway through is also recommended, as it further directs your attention to the model’s hands.

[For Older Adults] Recreational Activities Effective for Preventing the Need for Long-Term Care (131–140)

small change calculation

[Coin Counting] Brain Training #7: Instantly memorize and calculate how much change you have — a dementia-prevention video that boosts brain activity by strengthening working memory through dual-task exercises
small change calculation

Let me introduce a brain-training exercise that uses counting coins: the Coin Calculation game.

Coins will appear on the screen—memorize them within the time limit and calculate the total amount.

The double task of taking a quick look, memorizing, and then calculating greatly activates your brain.

Calculating and paying money are essential activities for living in society.

In fact, it has been reported that in the early stages of dementia, counting coins becomes difficult, leading people to rely more on bills.

If you’ve had fewer chances to shop in your daily life, please give this a try.

Giant Triangular Tower

Senior recreation: super simple, quick, and fun—Newspaper Tower #activities_for_seniors #newspaper #exciting
Giant Triangular Tower

It’s a very simple game, but actually tricky! Try the newspaper tower challenge! Lay a sheet of newspaper lengthwise and fold it so it becomes a quarter of its original width.

Next, fold it into a triangular prism shape and tuck in the end.

Because it stores flat once folded, you can make it once and play again and again, which is nice.

The rules for the newspaper tower are simple: stack the triangular pieces of newspaper on top of each other and compete to see how many you can pile up.

People watching should call out instructions like, “A little to the right, left, it’s leaning!” This also helps promote communication.

Ehomaki Game

[Setsubun Recreation] [Day Service] [Day Service Recreation] Ehomaki Setsubun Recreation Ehomaki Rolling Game
Ehomaki Game

Let’s turn the ehomaki we eat on Setsubun into a game.

Ehomaki are filled with lots of ingredients, right? On top of paper “nori” and “rice,” place ingredients made from long, thin strips of construction paper or fabric.

The key is to prepare colors that look like real ehomaki fillings, such as red and green.

Then, using both hands, roll it up as if you were making a real sushi roll.

When it’s finished, face the lucky direction for that year and take a big bite.

This idea of making ehomaki from paper or fabric seems like something older adults would also enjoy.

It’s a perfect game to do in February.