Effects of Fear of Falling on the Single-Step Threshold for Lateral Balance Recovery in Older Women

Fear of falling is associated with poor physical health and influences postural stability during whole-body movement. The ability to recover from lateral balance loss is required to prevent falls; however, the relationship between lateral balance recovery and fear of falling has not been established...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of geriatric physical therapy (2001) 2023-04, Vol.46 (2), p.116-121
Hauptverfasser: Tashiro, Hideyuki, Sato, Yui, Fukumoto, Kanta, Toki, Megumi, Kozuka, Naoki
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container_end_page 121
container_issue 2
container_start_page 116
container_title Journal of geriatric physical therapy (2001)
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creator Tashiro, Hideyuki
Sato, Yui
Fukumoto, Kanta
Toki, Megumi
Kozuka, Naoki
description Fear of falling is associated with poor physical health and influences postural stability during whole-body movement. The ability to recover from lateral balance loss is required to prevent falls; however, the relationship between lateral balance recovery and fear of falling has not been established. This study aimed to investigate whether fear of falling is associated with the stepping threshold for lateral balance recovery. This study included 56 ambulatory, community-dwelling women aged 65 years or older. We determined the single-step threshold as the maximum lean magnitude normalized with body weight from which participants could be suddenly released and still recover balance using a single side step. The short-form Falls Efficacy Scale International was used as a measure of fear of falling. The single-step threshold significantly correlated with age ( rs =-0.603) and the short-form Falls Efficacy Scale International score ( rs =-0.439). Ordinal regression analysis revealed that age (odds ratio, 0.826; 95% confidence interval, 0.742-0.920) and the short-form Falls Efficacy Scale International score (odds ratio, 0.811; 95% confidence interval, 0.680-0.966) were significantly associated with the single-step threshold, such that older age and greater fear of falling each independently predicted that failure to recover balance with a single step would occur at a lower percentage of body weight. Greater fear of falling was associated with reduced ability to recover from lateral balance loss in addition to aging. Future studies should explore whether evidence-based interventions to reduce fear of falling combined with perturbation training might lead to improved ability to recover from balance loss.
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subjects Aged
Aging
Body Weight
Confidence intervals
Falls
Fear
Female
Humans
Postural Balance
title Effects of Fear of Falling on the Single-Step Threshold for Lateral Balance Recovery in Older Women
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