# The Impact of Exposure to War and War-Related Stressors on Subjective Age and Accelerated Aging:

**Authors:** Anna Kornadt, Oksana Senyk, Ehud Bodner, Yuval Palgi, Amit Shrira, Lee Kimron Greenblatt, Kvitoslava Khorob

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1491 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how war and war-related stress affect how older adults feel about their age and aging process.

## Contribution

The study provides new empirical evidence on the impact of war exposure on subjective aging in older adults.

## Key findings

- Daily war-related stressors did not significantly affect daily subjective age or accelerated aging.
- Greater exposure to war-related events was associated with feeling older on a between-person level.
- Findings will be expanded with a second sample from Israel during the Israel-Hamas war.

## Abstract

Previous research shows that the experience of adversity and extreme life events can have an impact on the experience of aging (e.g., Avidor et al., 2016; Hoffman et al., 2022). Still, empirical evidence is sparse regarding the impact of war experiences, especially in short-term and daily contexts. We thus investigated the role of exposure to war-related events, stressors, and their experience on subjective age and subjective accelerated aging in two samples of older adults exposed to war. The first sample includes N = 71 adults aged 50-78 years from the Ukraine, who reported on their exposure to war-related events as well as their daily experience of aging, and daily war-related stressors over 14 days during the third year of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Multilevel regression analyses found that there was no effect of daily war-related stressors on daily subjective age (b = .45, p = .14) or accelerated aging (b = .11, p = .08), but on the between-person level, more exposure to war-related events was associated with feeling older (b = 1.10, p <.001). We will expand these findings with a second sample of Israeli adults aged 45 to 70, who reported on the same variables weekly over six weeks during the Israel-Hamas war in early 2025. Our findings inform theoretical models aimed to understand how extreme adversity and disasters affects older adults’ experience of aging.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12763335