Longitudinal Associations Between Anxiety, Frailty, and Aging Perceptions Among Hispanic Older Adults
Janet Lopez, Dahee Kim, Yi Liu, Rui Xie, Abigail Tice, Michael Dino, Ayse Malatyali, Ladda Thiamwong

TL;DR
This study explores how anxiety and frailty affect aging perceptions over time in Hispanic older adults, highlighting the need for culturally sensitive interventions.
Contribution
The study provides novel longitudinal insights into the relationship between psychological and physical health factors and aging perceptions in Hispanic older adults.
Findings
Anxiety was significantly associated with higher scores on the B-APQ Chronic subscale.
Both anxiety and frailty were significantly linked to increased emotional representation scores in aging perceptions.
Abstract
Aging perceptions significantly impact health outcomes for older adults, especially among Hispanic populations facing unique challenges. While cross-sectional studies have examined relationships between psychological factors, physical health indicators, and aging perceptions, longitudinal relationships remain understudied, particularly among Hispanic older adults. This study aimed to examine how anxiety and frailty are associated with aging perceptions over time. We analyzed data from 87 Hispanic older adults who participated in a Technology-Based Body and Mind Intervention to Prevent Falls. They were recruited from independent living facilities and community centers in Central Florida. Generalized Linear Mixed Models (GLMMs) examined relationships between aging perceptions (B-APQ total score and five subscales: timeline-chronic, emotion representation, control-positive,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAging and Gerontology Research · Technology Use by Older Adults · Death Anxiety and Social Exclusion
