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Journal Article

Citation

Wilson MM, Miller DK, Andresen EM, Malmstrom TK, Miller JP, Wolinsky FD. J. Gerontol. A Biol. Sci. Med. Sci. 2005; 60(3): 355-360.

Affiliation

Division of Geriatric Medicine, St. Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 S. Grand Blvd., M238, St. Louis, MO 53104, USA. wilsonmg@slu.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Gerontological Society of America)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15860474

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The prevalence of fear of falling and related activity restriction, and their joint distribution with falls and falls efficacy, have been inadequately addressed in population-based studies of middle-aged and African-American groups. METHODS: The African American Health project is a population-based panel study of 998 African Americans born in 1936-1950 from two areas of metropolitan St. Louis (an impoverished inner-city area and a suburban area). Fear of falling, fear-related activity restriction, and 24 frailty-related covariates were assessed during in-home evaluations in 2000-2001. RESULTS: We found that 12.6% of participants reported having fear of falling without activity restriction, 13.2% had fear of falling with activity restriction, and 74.2% had no fear of falling. Neither fear of falling nor fear-related activity restriction varied significantly across three birth cohorts (1946-1950, 1941-1945, and 1936-1940). Lack of overlap of these two phenomena with having a fall in the past 2 years and low falls efficacy was considerable. When examined across three groups (no fear, fear without activity restriction, and fear with activity restriction), a consistent pattern of decreasing health status and social, emotional, and physical functioning was demonstrated. CONCLUSIONS: In this population-based sample of 49- to 65-year-old African Americans, fear of falling and fear-related activity restriction were surprisingly common and not well explained by prior falls or low falls efficacy. These phenomena were already evident by age 49-55. Further study is warranted, including detailed qualitative investigations examining the timing, precursors, and consequences of fear of falling and fear-related activity restriction in minority and majority populations.

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