Physical Resilience After Hip Fracture: Unpacking the Roles of Resistance and Recovery
Chenkai Wu, Jianhong Xu, Yanxin Wang, Qian-Li Xue, Graciela Muniz-Terrera

TL;DR
This study explores how older adults resist and recover from hip fractures, finding that lower resilience is linked to higher mortality.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new framework for measuring physical resilience by distinguishing resistance and recovery after hip fractures.
Findings
Lower resistance after a hip fracture is associated with a 2.6-fold increase in mortality.
Slower recovery is linked to a modest but significant rise in mortality (HR=1.18).
Low resistance increases the risk of neurodegenerative mortality (sub-distribution HR=5.78).
Abstract
Physical resilience—the ability to withstand, recover, or adapt after a stressor— is critical in older adults, particularly after events such as hip fractures. We conceptualize physical resilience to comprise two distinct but related components: resistance and recovery. These components were used to evaluate how individuals respond to the stress of a hip fracture, both in terms of their immediate impact and their ability to regain health over time. Using data from nearly 5,000 hip fracture participants, we used linear mixed-effects models to characterize a composite health status, derived from electronic health record diagnoses, one year before and after hip fracture for each individual. Resistance was assessed as the abrupt change in composite health status observed immediately after the fracture, while recovery represented the subsequent rate of change. We used Cox and Fine-Gray…
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Taxonomy
TopicsResilience and Mental Health · Hip and Femur Fractures · Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Research
