Experiencing Cerebrovascular Diseases like Stroke and Fear of Falling: Longitudinal Results from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe.

IF 2.1 Q3 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY Geriatrics Pub Date : 2024-10-11 DOI:10.3390/geriatrics9050133
Agon Tahiraj, Hans-Helmut König, André Hajek
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Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to clarify the link between experiencing cerebrovascular diseases (strokes as an explicit example) and fear of falling (FOF) among middle-aged and older adults in Europe. Methods: Longitudinal data were used from wave 5 to wave 7 of the representative Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). Self-reported tools were used to quantify the key variables. Fear of falling was similarly assessed using a dichotomous yes or no question, "For the past six months at least, have you been bothered by any of the health conditions on this card", with fear of falling being one of the options. It was adjusted for various sociodemographic and health-related factors. In particular, to account for unobserved heterogeneity, conditional fixed effect regressions (FE) were used. Accordingly, change in an individual's FOF status over the included waves was analysed and correlated with the reported change of all the included time-varying independent variables within the same individual, including experiencing stroke or other cerebrovascular diseases. The final analytical sample equalled n = 22.071 observations. Results: Conditional logistic FE regressions showed that the onset of a stroke or other forms of cerebrovascular disease was not associated with an increased likelihood of experiencing fear of falling (OR = 1.25, p = 0.095). However, stratified by sex, such an association was present in men (OR = 1.79, p = 0.006), though not in women (OR = 0.94, p = 0.732). Conclusions: The onset of a stroke or other cerebrovascular diseases was associated with an increased likelihood of experiencing FOF in men but not women. Efforts are required to assist older men in avoiding FOF after the onset of stroke or other cerebrovascular pathologies.

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中风等脑血管疾病的经历与对跌倒的恐惧:欧洲健康、老龄和退休调查的纵向结果。
研究目的本研究旨在阐明欧洲中老年人经历脑血管疾病(以中风为例)与跌倒恐惧(FOF)之间的联系。研究方法研究使用了具有代表性的欧洲健康、老龄和退休调查(SHARE)第 5 波至第 7 波的纵向数据。使用自我报告工具对关键变量进行量化。对跌倒恐惧的评估同样采用了 "是 "或 "否 "的二分法问题,即 "至少在过去 6 个月中,您是否受到这张卡片上任何健康状况的困扰",其中跌倒恐惧是选项之一。该问卷根据各种社会人口和健康相关因素进行了调整。特别是,为了考虑未观察到的异质性,使用了条件固定效应回归(FE)。因此,我们分析了一个人的 FOF 状态在各次波次中的变化,并将其与同一人的所有时变自变量(包括中风或其他脑血管疾病)的报告变化相关联。最终分析样本为 n = 22.071 个观测值。结果条件逻辑 FE 回归显示,中风或其他形式脑血管疾病的发生与跌倒恐惧的可能性增加无关(OR = 1.25,p = 0.095)。然而,按性别分层后,男性(OR = 1.79,p = 0.006)和女性(OR = 0.94,p = 0.732)存在这种关联。结论中风或其他脑血管疾病的发生与男性经历 FOF 的可能性增加有关,但与女性无关。需要努力帮助老年男性避免在中风或其他脑血管疾病发生后出现 FOF。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Geriatrics
Geriatrics 医学-老年医学
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
115
审稿时长
20.03 days
期刊介绍: • Geriatric biology • Geriatric health services research • Geriatric medicine research • Geriatric neurology, stroke, cognition and oncology • Geriatric surgery • Geriatric physical functioning, physical health and activity • Geriatric psychiatry and psychology • Geriatric nutrition • Geriatric epidemiology • Geriatric rehabilitation
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