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Attitudes to ageing and change in frailty status: the English longitudinal study of ageing

Attitudes to ageing and change in frailty status: the English longitudinal study of ageing
Attitudes to ageing and change in frailty status: the English longitudinal study of ageing
Background: older people with more negative attitudes to ageing are at increased risk of several adverse outcomes, including decline in physical function and increased difficulties with activities of daily living.

Objective: we investigated whether negative attitudes to ageing increase the risk of the onset or progression of frailty.

Method: participants were 3,505 men and women aged 60 years and over from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. They completed a 12-item questionnaire on attitudes to ageing. Exploratory factor analysis was used to examine the structure of these items, and a single factor was derived which we labelled “physical and psychological loss.” Frailty was assessed by the Fried phenotype of physical frailty at waves 2 and 4, and by a frailty index at waves 2-5.

Results: having a more positive attitude to ageing as regards “physical and psychological loss” was associated with a decreased risk of becoming physically frail or pre-frail at follow-up. For a standard deviation increment in score, the relative risk ratios (95% confidence interval), adjusted for age, sex and baseline level of physical frailty, were 0.86 (0.79, 0.94) for pre-frailty and 0.72 (0.63, 0.83) for frailty. Further adjustment for other potential confounding variables had only slight attenuating effects on these associations: multivariable-adjusted relative risk ratios were 0.89 (0.81, 0.98) for pre-frailty and 0.78 (0.68, 0.91) for frailty. Attitude to ageing was not associated with change in the frailty index over time after adjustment for potential confounding variables.

Conclusion: older people who have a more positive attitude to ageing are at reduced risk of becoming physically frail or pre-frail. Future research needs to replicate this finding and discover the underlying mechanisms. Attitude to ageing was not a risk factor for change in the more broadly defined frailty index.
0304-324X
Gale, Catharine
5bb2abb3-7b53-42d6-8aa7-817e193140c8
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Gale, Catharine
5bb2abb3-7b53-42d6-8aa7-817e193140c8
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6

Gale, Catharine and Cooper, Cyrus (2017) Attitudes to ageing and change in frailty status: the English longitudinal study of ageing. Gerontology. (doi:10.1159/000477169).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: older people with more negative attitudes to ageing are at increased risk of several adverse outcomes, including decline in physical function and increased difficulties with activities of daily living.

Objective: we investigated whether negative attitudes to ageing increase the risk of the onset or progression of frailty.

Method: participants were 3,505 men and women aged 60 years and over from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. They completed a 12-item questionnaire on attitudes to ageing. Exploratory factor analysis was used to examine the structure of these items, and a single factor was derived which we labelled “physical and psychological loss.” Frailty was assessed by the Fried phenotype of physical frailty at waves 2 and 4, and by a frailty index at waves 2-5.

Results: having a more positive attitude to ageing as regards “physical and psychological loss” was associated with a decreased risk of becoming physically frail or pre-frail at follow-up. For a standard deviation increment in score, the relative risk ratios (95% confidence interval), adjusted for age, sex and baseline level of physical frailty, were 0.86 (0.79, 0.94) for pre-frailty and 0.72 (0.63, 0.83) for frailty. Further adjustment for other potential confounding variables had only slight attenuating effects on these associations: multivariable-adjusted relative risk ratios were 0.89 (0.81, 0.98) for pre-frailty and 0.78 (0.68, 0.91) for frailty. Attitude to ageing was not associated with change in the frailty index over time after adjustment for potential confounding variables.

Conclusion: older people who have a more positive attitude to ageing are at reduced risk of becoming physically frail or pre-frail. Future research needs to replicate this finding and discover the underlying mechanisms. Attitude to ageing was not a risk factor for change in the more broadly defined frailty index.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2 May 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 August 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 413876
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413876
ISSN: 0304-324X
PURE UUID: ed1baab8-c0e1-44c4-9628-4e050f4cda57
ORCID for Catharine Gale: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3361-8638
ORCID for Cyrus Cooper: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3510-0709

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Date deposited: 08 Sep 2017 16:30
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:46

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