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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Hilliness and the Development of Walking Difficulties Among Community-Dwelling Older People

Erja PortegijsKimmo SuomiTaina RantanenKirsi E. KeskinenMerja RantakokkoMerja Rantakokko

subject

MalevanhuksetasuinympäristömäetWalkingslopesLogistic regression03 medical and health sciencesmobility limitation0302 clinical medicineResidence CharacteristicsRisk FactorsPrevalenceliikuntakykyHumansMedicine030212 general & internal medicineRisk factorBaseline (configuration management)liikuntaesteisetSocioeconomic statusFinlandAgedneighborhoodAged 80 and overCommunity and Home Care030505 public healthpinnanmuodotbusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)agingta3141Odds ratioGISConfidence intervalLogistic ModelsMobility LimitationslopeFemaleGeriatrics and Gerontology0305 other medical sciencebusinesshuman activitiesGerontologyneighbourhoodikääntyneetDemography

description

Objective: The objective of this study is to study the associations of objectively defined hilliness with the prevalence and incidence of walking difficulties among community-dwelling older adults, and to explore whether behavioral, health, or socioeconomic factors would fully or partially explain these associations. Method: Baseline interviews ( n = 848, 75-90 years) on difficulties in walking 500 m, frequency of moving through the neighborhood, and perceived hilliness as a barrier to outdoor mobility were conducted. Two-year follow-up interviews ( n = 551) on difficulties in walking 500 m were conducted among participants without baseline walking difficulties. Hilliness objectively defined as the mean slope in 500-m road network. Results: Logistic regression showed that hilliness was associated with incident walking difficulties at the 2-year follow-up (odds ratio [OR] = 1.66, 95% confidence interval [CI] = [1.09, 2.51]) but not with the prevalence of walking difficulties at baseline. Adding behavioral, health, or socioeconomic factors to the models did not markedly change the results. Discussion: Greater hilliness should be considered a risk factor for developing walking difficulties among older adults.

10.1177/0898264318820448http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0898264318820448