Falls and loneliness among Chinese older adults: evidence from a nationally representative longitudinal study
Zhiqiang Yu, Meng Jiang, Yueyun Zhang

TL;DR
This study finds that falls among older Chinese adults are linked to increased loneliness, with age and social adaptation playing key roles.
Contribution
The study provides longitudinal evidence on how falls affect loneliness in Chinese older adults, including age-specific differences and a mediating role of social adaptation.
Findings
Falls are associated with higher levels of loneliness in older adults.
The effect is stronger for the young-old (60–69) and oldest-old (80+) compared to the old-old (70–79).
Social adaptation mediates 10% of the effect of falls on loneliness.
Abstract
Falls and loneliness are both common during older adulthood and detrimental to older adults’ health. However, it remains unclear whether and how falls may be longitudinally related to loneliness among older adults, despite some cross-sectional evidence in both Western and Chinese contexts. This study aimed to examine the longitudinal association between falls and loneliness among Chinese older adults, its potential variation across age groups, and the role of social adaptation in mediating the association. Data were from four waves of the China Longitudinal Aging Social Survey (CLASS, 2014–2020), and random-effects regression models were applied to a sample of 31,406 person-wave observations from 11,063 respondents. Both falls and loneliness were self-reported. Mediation analysis was conducted using the Baron and Kenny method and Bootstrapping procedures. First, falls were associated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Balance, Gait, and Falls Prevention · Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders
