Visual Scanning and Falls in Older Adults: The Mexico Health and Aging Study
Angela L. Xu, Melissa Li, Anoopum S. Gupta, Susanne M. Morton, Ali G. Hamedani

TL;DR
The study found that poor visual scanning ability in older adults is linked to a higher risk of recurrent falls, suggesting that improving visual scanning could help prevent falls.
Contribution
This study is the first to show a population-level link between visual scanning and recurrent falls in older adults using nationally representative data.
Findings
Lower visual scanning ability was associated with a 36% higher risk of recurrent falls over 3 years.
The association between visual scanning and incident falls or injury falls weakened after adjusting for health factors.
Visual scanning behavior is important for fall prevention in older adults.
Abstract
For selected patients at increased fall risk, physical therapy may include instruction to look around and observe the environment to identify obstacles, known as visual scanning or tracking, and avoid them. Whether visual scanning reduces fall risk more broadly in the general population is unknown. Using data from the Mexico Health and Aging Study (MHAS), a longitudinal, nationally representative study of adults 50 years of age and older in Mexico (n = 13,850), we measured the association between visual scanning test performance and three fall‐related outcomes: any fall in the previous 2 years, recurrent falls, and falls with injury. We conducted both cross‐sectional and longitudinal analyses over 3 years of follow‐up; logistic regression models were adjusted for demographic variables, self‐reported comorbidities, daily activity limitations, and a standardized, composite measure of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFrailty in Older Adults · Balance, Gait, and Falls Prevention · Aging, Health, and Disability
