健康与退休研究
老年学
心理学
心理弹性
感知
弹性(材料科学)
成功老龄化
健康衰老
康复
医学
社会心理学
热力学
物理
神经科学
作者
Zeyi Zhang,Jingjing Wang,Bin Ma,Jingyi Wang,Yuanmin Jia,Ou Chen
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.apmr.2023.02.006
摘要
Objective To determine whether self-perceptions of aging (SPAs) predict physical resilience after a fall and whether SPA and physical resilience affect subsequent social engagement in older adults with a fall. Design Prospective cohort study. Setting General community. Participants Older adults who reported a fall within 2 years after baseline data collection (N=1707, mean age 72.9 years, 60.9% women). Main Outcome Measure Physical resilience indicates the ability to resist or recover from functional decline from a stressor. The change in frailty status from directly after the fall to up to 2 years of follow-up was used to generate 4 physical resilience phenotypes. Social engagement was dichotomized based on the presence at 1 of the 5 social activities at least once a month. The 8-item Attitudes Toward Own Aging Scale was used to assess SPA at baseline. Multinomial logistic regression and nonlinear mediation analysis were used. Results Positive prefall SPA predicted more resilient phenotypes after a fall. Both positive SPA and physical resilience affected subsequent social engagement. Physical resilience partially mediated the association between SPA and social re-engagement (mediated percentage of 14.5%, P=.004). This mediation effect was fully driven by those with previous falls. Conclusion Positive SPA promotes physical resilience in older adults with a fall, both of which affect subsequent social engagement. Physical resilience partially mediated the effect of SPA on social engagement but only for previous fallers. Multidimensional recovery incorporating psychological, physiological, and social aspects should be stressed in the rehabilitation of older adults who fall.
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