Psychological resilience and cognitive frailty progression among older adults: Evidence from China in 2002-2018
Ruoxi Ding, Yanan Luo

TL;DR
Higher psychological resilience is linked to lower risk of cognitive frailty in older Chinese adults, suggesting resilience could help prevent cognitive decline.
Contribution
This study is the first to examine the longitudinal relationship between psychological resilience and cognitive frailty progression in a large national cohort of older adults.
Findings
A 1-point increase in psychological resilience score reduced cognitive frailty risk by 9%.
Lower psychological resilience trajectories predicted greater cognitive and physical decline.
Psychological resilience interventions may help prevent cognitive impairment and disability in aging populations.
Abstract
Psychological resilience (PR) may protect against cognitive frailty, yet its relationship remains unexplored. This study examines the association between PR and cognitive frailty progression among older adults in China using 16 years of nationally representative cohort data. Data from the Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey (CLHLS, 2002–2018) were analyzed. Cognitive frailty was defined as coexisting physical frailty and cognitive impairment without dementia. Cognitive function was assessed using the Chinese Mini-Mental State Examination (CMMSE), and physical frailty was measured through daily living, instrumental activities, and functional limitations. Fixed-effect models, Latent Class Growth Models, and multinomial logistic and Cox regression analyses were used to explore PR trajectories and their links to cognitive frailty progression. A 1-point increase in PR score…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFrailty in Older Adults · Aging and Gerontology Research · Resilience and Mental Health
