Litcius/Paper detail

A longitudinal study of the negative impact of falls on health, well-being, and survival in later life: the protective role of perceived control

Harpa Lind Jónsdóttir, Joelle C. Ruthig

2020Aging & Mental Health30 citationsDOI

Abstract

Objectives: Falls can have detrimental effects on older adults' psychological well-being, physical health, and survival rates. However, certain psychosocial mediators may lessen the negative impact of suffering a fall on health and well-being. Perceived control is a psychosocial factor that was examined as a mediator of the falls – health and well-being relationship in the current study.Method: Participants were 232 community-dwelling older adults, age 68 or older who took part in a longitudinal study in 2008 and 2010 and completed measures of perceived control, self-rated health, health-care utilization, number of falls, depressive symptomology, and perceived stress. Survival was also tracked for seven years from 2008 through 2015.Results: Older adults who suffered a fall had poorer health and well-being two years later compared to those who did not suffer a fall. Perceived control mediated the negative impact of falls on subsequent health and well-being outcomes two years later. Among older adults who experienced a fall, higher levels of perceived control predicted better subsequent health and well-being. Suffering one or more falls also predicted less likelihood of survival seven years later, beyond the effects of age, gender, marital status, and education.Conclusion: Findings highlight the importance of assessing risk of falling and levels of perceived control in later life.

Topics & Concepts

PsychosocialLongitudinal studyMarital statusGerontologyMedicineInjury preventionOccupational safety and healthFear of fallingPerceived controlSuicide preventionPoison controlLife satisfactionPsychologyPopulationPsychiatryDevelopmental psychologyEnvironmental healthPsychotherapistPathologyBalance, Gait, and Falls PreventionHealth disparities and outcomesPhysical Activity and Health