| Literature DB >> 34912493 |
Scott MacKay1, Patricia Ebert2,3,4, Cathy Harbidge4, David B Hogan5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fear of falling (FOF) is prevalent among older adults and associated with adverse health outcomes. Over recent years a substantial body of research has emerged on its epidemiology, associated factors, and consequences. This scoping review summarizes the FOF literature published between April 2015 and March 2020 in order to inform current practice and identify gaps in the literature.Entities:
Keywords: falls; fear of falling; older adults; scoping review
Year: 2021 PMID: 34912493 PMCID: PMC8629501 DOI: 10.5770/cgj.24.521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can Geriatr J ISSN: 1925-8348
Overview of Study Characteristicsa
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| Aibar-Almazan | Cross-sectional observational | Associations between FOF and both demographic and physical factors. | 235 | Age: 69.21 (7.56). 100% post-menopausal women. 54.0% married. 47.2% primary education. 69.8% retired. | 28.1% reported fall(s) in the previous year. | FES-I; ABC | FES-I: 25.89 (8.94), 38.3% FES-I score >26. ABC: 72.73 (20.12), 31.91% ABC score <67. | Positive associations: BMI, falls history, depression, PBF, years since menopause. Negative associations: grip strength, gait speed. | Lower gait speed, higher BMI and falls history predicted FES-I and ABC scores and fall risk. Sarcopenic obesity and obesity (BMI >30) predicted FES-I scores and fall risk. |
| Allali | Longitudinal observational (study period: 20.1 (12.2) months) | Determined predictors of falls based on FOF and PIGD status. | 449 | Age: 76.48 (6.61). 58.6% female. Non-demented sample. | 18.9% fell within 1 year of baseline. 37.6% fell during study period. | ABC; Single question, yes/no responses | Prevalence: 23.4% | FOF predicted incident falls in individuals with PIGD only. | FOF predicted falls in an unadjusted model but this effect was lost in the adjusted model. |
| Auais | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between FOF and mobility disability. | 1875 | Age: 69.1 (2.8). 51.7% female. Education: 9.9 (5.7) years. 41.9% low income. 16.7% living alone. | Number of falls in the last year: 0.6 (2.0). | FES-I | Prevalence: no/low (46.3%), moderate (32.2%), high (21.5%). FES-I: 23.3 (8.7). | Rates of FOF were higher in women and those with moderate and high FOF were more likely to report mobility disability. | FOF significantly associated with mobility disability across all study sites though with variation between sites. |
| Auais | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between FOF and life-space mobility. | 1841 | Age: 69.0 (2.8). 51.9% female. Education: 10 (5.7) years. 42.0% insufficient income. | Number of falls in the last year: 0.6 (2.0). | FES-I | FES-I: 23.3 (8.8). | FES-I scores were negatively associated with life-space mobility. | FOF negatively related to life-space mobility, though this relationship was not significant in all study sites. |
| Auais | Longitudinal observational (2-year period) | Relationship between FOF, mobility limitation, and poor physical performance. | 1355 | Age: 69.0 (2.8). Education: 9.7 (6.2) years. Population non-demented with no functional disability at baseline. | N/A | FES-I | FES-I: 24.0 (9.0). 22% had FES-I > 27. | FOF was associated with an increased risk of reporting mobility disability and/or developing poor physical performance over two years. | High FOF (FES-I > 27) at baseline associated with a 175% increase in incident mobility disability and a 62% increase in developing poor physical performance. |
| Bjerk | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between FOF, health-related QOL, and physical function. | 155 | Age: 82.7 (6.7). 79.4% female. 36% >12 years education. 84.5% living alone. | 100% had prior fall(s) and were receiving homecare. | FES-I | FES-I: 30.7 (9.8). | FOF was associated with lower health-related QOL (SF-36 scores). | Higher FOF associated with lower health-related QOL on all SF-36 subscales except bodily pain and social function. |
| Chang | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between FOF and both QOL (SF-36 scores) and clinical factors. | 3824 | Age: 73.9 (5.8). 56.4% male. | Males: 10.5%, Females: 17.6%. | Single question, yes/no responses | Prevalence: 53.4% (45.9% for males, 63.1% for females). | See ‘Main Findings’. | FOF associated with age 75+, lower QOL, fall history, and medical comorbidities. For males, FOF was also associated with lower perceived access to medical help in an emergency. |
| Chang | Longitudinal observational (7-year period) | Relationship between FOF and mortality over 7 years. | 3814 | Age: 73.8 (5.8). 56.4% male. 75.1% married. 82.6% literate. 94.5% living with others. | 15.6% reported a fall in the past year. | Single question, yes/no responses | Overall FOF prevalence: 53.4%. | FOF was associated with a higher risk of mortality over the study period. | FOF associated with higher mortality risk. This association was significant for males and marginal for females. |
| Chippendale & Lee (2017)( | Cross-sectional observational | Factors associated with outdoor falls for those with and without FOF. | 120 | Age: 66.7 (8.1). 55% female. 32.5% some college education. 50.8% Caucasian. 70.8% urban neighborhood. | 71.2% reported a previous outdoor fall (23.3% once, 35.5% 2–3 times, 12.4% 4+ times). | Outdoor Fall Question-naire( | FOF prevalence: 58.8% if previous falls reported, 40% if no falls reported. | FOF was associated with older age, female sex, use of an assistive device, history of fall(s), and depressive symptoms. | Participants with FOF reported intrinsic factors (e.g., knee buckled) as the cause of their fall more often and reported their personal experience was more impactful on FOF than being aware of another person falling. |
| Choi | Longitudinal observational (2-year period). | Relationship between FOF and functional decline over 2 years. | 1560 | Age: 77.17 (5.64). 100% female. 86.7% elementary school or less education. 32.3% living alone. | 4.60% reported a fall history at baseline. | Single question, yes/no responses | 22.9% consistently reported FOF. 28.4% experienced a change in FOF during the study period. | FOF was associated with greater comorbidity, cognitive impairment, worse sensory function, and depressive symptoms. | FOF associated with greater functional decline. FOF had a stronger association with functional decline than fear-induced activity avoidance. FOF and activity avoidance did not always occur together. |
| Choi & Ko (2015)( | Cross-sectional observational | Factors associated with FOF and fear-induced activity avoidance. | 4247 | Age: 70.57 (5.35). 63.7% male. Collected data on education, living arrangement, SES, physical health, and psychosocial factors. | No FOF: 0.9%, FOF alone: 2.9%, Fear-induced activity restriction: 14.8%. | Single question, yes/no responses | 77.5% reported some FOF. 28.9% reported fear-induced activity restriction. | See ‘Main Findings’. | FOF associated with older age, female sex, lower education, depressive symptoms, impaired visual/auditory function, difficulty with IADLs, and having 1+ chronic diseases. |
| de Souza | Longitudinal observational (2-year period). | Relationship between FOF and incident falls over 2 years. | 345 | Age: 71.0% were 60–75, 29.0% 75+. 65.2% female. 79.1% living with someone. Education in years: 4.61 (4.1). | 37.1% reported a history of falls (1 fall: 20%, 2+ falls: 17.1%). | FES-I | FES-I: 25.48 (11.9). | FOF was associated with a greater risk of recurrent falls. | FOF (i.e., FES-I scores) was associated with recurrent falls but not single falls over the study period. |
| Dierking | Longitudinal observational (10-year period) | Factors associated with FOF. | 1682 | Age: no FOF 78.7 (5.2), any FOF 79.6 (5.5), severe FOF 79.9 (5.6). 51.8% male. Sample all Mexican Americans. | No FOF: 20.9%, any FOF: 38.5%, severe FOF: 50.5%. | Single question, 4-point Likert scale | FOF prevalence (baseline): 56.7%, 15.6% severe. | FOF predictors: female sex, depression, chronic health conditions, falls history, higher MMSE score, IADL limitations, frequent familial interactions. | Severe FOF predictors: older age, female sex, depressive symptoms, chronic conditions, married. Frequent friend interaction and higher education were protective factors. |
| Donoghue | Longitudinal observational (2-year period) | Relationship between FOF, activity restriction, falls, and disability over 2 years. | 1621 | Age: 71.2 (5.2). 51.6% female. Education level evenly distributed. | One fall: 15.4%, 2+ falls: 7.4%. | Single question, yes/no responses followed by rating severity. | 26.3% reported FOF (20.9% somewhat afraid, 5.4% very afraid). | Reporting FOF at follow-up was predicted by reporting unsteadiness at baseline. | Self-reported unsteadiness associated with an increased risk of FOF, fear-related activity restriction, recurrent falls, and disability. |
| Ehrlich | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between visual impairment, falls, and fall-related outcomes (e.g., FOF). | 11558 | 55.3% female. Collected data on race, education, and Medicaid beneficiary (yes/no). | Falls in last year: No visual impairment (13.5%), impairment: 20.6% | Single question, yes/no responses | Prevalence: 26.7% without visual impairment, 48.4% with impairment. | See ‘Main Findings’. | FOF was associated with visual impairment, older age, female sex, being Caucasian or Hispanic, higher BMI, and having more medical comorbidities. |
| El Fakiri | Cross-sectional observational | Prevalence of FOF and falls, & differences between ethnic groups. | 8892 | 54.6% aged 65–74, 45.4% aged 75+. 57.9% female. 89.8% Dutch, 1.9% Moroccan, 6.6% Surinamese, 2.1% Turkish. | 35.5% reported one fall in the last year, 14.7% reported 2+ falls in the last year. | Single question, 5-point Likert scale | FOF prevalence varied by ethnic group: Dutch (18%), Moroccan (36%), Surinamese (43%), Turkish (44%). | FOF associated with older age, female sex, living alone, living in a deprived neighborhood, low income, functional limitations, medical co-morbidity, poor perceived health, depressive symptoms, loneliness, physical inactivity, and BMI. | Ethnic minority groups experienced significantly more FOF than Dutch participants. This relationship was not seen for falls. See ‘Factors Associated with FOF’. |
| Gazibara | Cross-sectional observational | Factors associated with falls and FOF, and to quantify the prevalence of both. | 354 | Age: fallers = 75.3 (5.5), non-fallers = 73.3 (6.0). 72.7% female. Collected data on education, income, marital status, and living arrangement. | 15.8% fell in the past 6 months (1 fall: 78.6%, 2 falls: 10.7%, 3+ falls: 10.7%). | FES-I; single question, yes/no responses | Prevalence: fallers 28.6%, non-fallers 8.4%. FES-I scores: fallers 19.2 (13.1), non-fallers 14.2 (8.3). | FOF was associated with previous falls and female sex. | FOF higher in fallers. FOF was independently associated with falling. Women reported higher FES scores than men. FOF and female sex were associated with falls. |
| Hajek | Cross-sectional observational | Associations between FOF and psychosocial factors. | 7779 | Age: 64.5 (11.2). 51% female. Collected data on income and marital status. | N/A | Single question, yes/no responses | FOF prevalence: 18.0%. | FOF was associated with older age, female sex, low income, not being married, previous falls, depressive symptoms, and comorbidity. | Positive associations: perceived stress, negative effect. Negative associations: loneliness, life satisfaction, positive effect, optimism, self-efficacy, self-esteem, and self-regulation. |
| Harada | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between FOF and perceived neighborhood factors. | 238 | Age: 60.5% were 65–74, 39.5% 75+. 55% male. | 17.6% reported fall(s) in the previous year. | Single question, 4-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (not at all) to 4 (very much). | FOF data reported as continuous variable. Overall mean value: 2.3 (0.1). | Lower FOF was significantly correlated with higher step counts and locomotive moderate-vigorous physical activity. | In a multiple regression analysis, the interaction between crime safety and FOF was significantly associated with total and locomotive moderate-vigorous physical activity. This relationship was only seen in those with low FOF. |
| Hoang | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between FOF and both psychosocial and demographic factors. | 153 | Age: 72.00 (8.47). 55.6% female. 62.7% married, 8.5% living alone. 73.6% secondary school education or less. | 51% reported a fall history (1 fall: 30.1%, 2 falls: 14.4%, 3+ falls: 6.5%). | FES-I | 64% reported high FOF (FES-I scores 28+), 27.5% reported moderate FOF (FES-I scores 20–27). | See ‘Main Findings’. | There was a high prevalence of FOF overall. Positive associations with FOF: older age, female sex, depression, and falls history. Negative associations with FOF: ADL independence, general health perception, TUG performance. |
| James | Cross-sectional observational | Relationships between FOF, fluency in English, and mobility limitations (i.e., SPPB score 9 or less). | 1169 | Age: 78.7 (5.0). 60.1% female. 50.3% married. 43.6% household income $5000–$9999. 80.3% SPPB score 9 or less. Entire sample Mexican Americans. | 30.5% reported a fall in the last year (1 fall: 17.6%, 2 falls: 6.5%, 3+ times: 6.4%). | Single question, 4-point Likert scale. | FOF prevalence: 58.9%. | See ‘Main Findings’. | FOF was associated with previous falls, number of chronic conditions, and female sex. Those 80+ and not fluent in English reported FOF more often, though this relationship was lost after adjusting for covariates. |
| Jeon | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between FOF, falls history, and physical/clinical characteristics. | 101 | Age: 76.44 (8.18). 86.1% female. 58.4% living alone. | 54.5% reported previous falls (1 fall: 14.9%, 2+ falls: 39.6%). | Survey of Activities and FOF in the Elderly | SAFE scores: repeated fallers 26.15 (10.56), one-time fallers 17.73 (8.79), non-fallers 14.17 (6.65). | FOF had a significant association with fall history. | FOF was significantly higher in repeated fallers than one-time fallers, and higher in one-time fallers than non-fallers. Repeated fallers performed worse on physical testing than the other groups. |
| Johnson & McLeod (2016)( | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between FOF and perceived difficulty with grocery shopping. | 98 | Age: 82.4 (6.6). 83% female. 81% lived alone. 81.6% high school education or less. | Difficulty shopping: 30.8%, no difficulty shopping: 19.5% reported falls in the past 4 months. | FES; ABC. | FES scores: difficulty shopping 73.8 (21.5), no difficulty 84.3 (17.7); ABC scores: 57.8 (23.9) & 69.5 (22.6) respectively. | FOF was associated with difficulty grocery shopping. | Participants who reported difficulty grocery shopping reported significantly worse scores on the FES and ABC than those who reported no difficulty. |
| Lavedan | Longitudinal observational (2-year period). | Relationship between FOF, falls, and both demographic and clinical factors. | 640 | Age: 81.5 (5.0). 60.3% female. 50% married. 36.5% no education or illiterate. 40.3% living with spouse. | 25% fell in the last year (men: 21.7%, women: 27.1%). | Single question, yes/no responses. | FOF prevalence (baseline): 41.5%. | FOF was associated with previous falls, female sex, comorbidities, depression, and ADL disability. | 41.7% of subjects who reported FOF at baseline suffered a fall, though FOF did not predict FOF in a Cox regression analysis. |
| Lee | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between FOF outdoors and neighborhood characteristics. | 394 | Age: 65.4 (8.8). 55.58% female. 82.95% non-Hispanic white, 75.7% married or cohabiting, 67.02% annual income >$50000. | 6.75% reported a history of falling outdoors. | Single question, 4-point Likert scale. | FOF prevalence: 17.9%. | FOF was associated with both demographic and neighborhood characteristics. See ‘Main Findings’. | FOF was associated with older age, female sex, previous falls, difficulty walking 400m, many drainage ditches, and many broken sidewalks. Low traffic speed was negatively associated with FOF. |
| Lee | Cross-sectional observational | FOF was the outcome in a hierarchical regression model. Associations between FOF, demographic and clinical factors. | 7730 | Age: 59.7% were 65–74, 40.3% 75+. 59.2% female. 62.8% living with spouse, 65.8% 0–6 years education, 16.9% driving. | 23.3% reported a history of falling. | Single question, 3-point Likert scale. | FOF prevalence: 96.7% with fall history, 75.1% without fall history. | FOF associations: age 75+, female sex, low education, non-drivers, depression, comorbidities, and discomfort with neighborhood. Protective: social support, neighborhood facility access. | FOF had higher odds of being reported if participants were female or reported high discomfort with their neighborhood, both for those with and without a history of falls. |
| Litwin | Longitudinal observational (2–3 year study period). | Relationship between FOF and falls at follow-up. | 22533 | Age: 74.37 (6.94). 56.5% female. 64.14% partnered/married. 46.91% primary education. | Baseline: 5.50% reported falls. Follow-up: 10.75% reported falls. | Single question, yes/no responses | FOF prevalence: 12.26%. | FOF was associated with falls at follow-up. An interaction term (FOF x activity restriction) was negatively associated with falls at follow-up. | FOF predicted falls if mobility limitation was low to moderate. If mobility limitation was high, FOF was negatively associated with falls at follow-up. |
| Makino | Longitudinal observational (4-year period). | Incident disability between baseline and follow-up. | 4329 | Age: 71.8 (5.4). 51.5% female. | 14.1% reported falls in the last year. | Single question, 4-point Likert scale | FOF baseline prevalence: 43.3%. | FOF was present more often in those who developed disability and was higher in fallers than non-fallers. | The risk of incident disability across the study period was higher for those who reported FOF at baseline, regardless of their fall history. |
| Malini | Cross-sectional observational | Associations between FOF and demographic, clinical, and social variables. | 742 | Age: 76.7 (7.03). 70.2% female. 43.4% married/cohabiting. 80.3% 5+ years education. | 29.4% reported a history of falls (1–2 falls: 23.6%, 3+ falls: 4.9%). | FES-I | FOF prevalence: 51.9%. | FOF associations: older, female, widows, sedentary, past falls, fracture after falls, comorbidity, sensory impairment, walking aid use, (I)ADL dependency, worse grip/gait speed, depressive symptoms, worse cognition, and less social support. | FOF was associated with previous falls, taking 7+ medications, hearing impairment, ADL dependency, slow gait speed, worse self-rated health, and depressive symptoms in a logistic regression analysis. |
| Moreira | Cross-sectional observational | Associations between FOF and both demographic and clinical factors. | 4449 | Age: without DM = 73.5 (6.5), with DM = 73.0 (5.9). 66.1% female without DM, 67.1% with DM. | With DM: 28.1%, without DM: 34.1% reported falls in the previous 12 months. | FES-I | FOF prevalence: 53.6% without DM, 60.8% with DM. | FOF associated with female sex, chronic conditions, depression, visual impairment, worse health self-perception, previous falls, obesity, (I)ADL dependency, grip strength, and gait speed. | There were some differences in the factors associated with FOF for diabetics and non-diabetics. |
| Moreland | Cross-sectional observational | Associations between fall-related rehabilitation utilization and demographic and clinical factors. | 7062 | Age: 30% 65–69, 28% 70–74, 19% 75–79, 12% 80–84, 11% 85+. 55% female. 80% Caucasian. 27% living alone. | 31% reported fall(s) in the previous year (1 fall: 18%, 2+ falls: 13%). | FOF measure not clear. Appears to be a single question, yes/no responses | FOF prevalence: 26%. | FOF was associated with having received fall-related rehabilitation compared to not having received it. | Along with FOF, previous falls, poor SPPB scores (4 or less), and hip fracture history were associated with receiving fall-related rehabilitation. |
| Oh | Cross-sectional observational | FOF was the outcome in this study. | 7924 | Age: 73.51 (6.04). 60.9% female. 68.6% 0–6 years education. 65.6% living with spouse. | 21% reported experiencing fall(s) in the last year. | Single question, 3-point Likert scale | FOF prevalence: 75.6%. | See ‘Main Findings’. | FOF associated with being older and female, past falls, limited physical performance, comorbidities, IADL limitations, living without a spouse, low education, and low life satisfaction. |
| Park | Cross-sectional observational | Association between depressive symptoms and falls in the past year and prior 3 years. | 977 | Age: 77.26 (25.55). 55.9% female. Education (years): 7.45 (6.07). | Reported as a continuous variable. Falls within 1 year: 1.65 (1.39), within 3 years: 2.65 (8.63). | Single question, 5-point Likert scale | FOF data reported as continuous variable. Mean values for women and men were 2.55 and 1.85, respectively. | FOF was associated with depressive symptoms, anxiety, (I)ADL impairment, and previous falls. FOF was reported more by women than men. | Depressive symptoms were associated with both falls and FOF. The relationship between falls and depressive symptoms was stronger in women compared to men. |
| Pauelsen | Cross-sectional observational | FES-I scores, FOF, and fall consequence concerns. | 153 | Age: 78.0 (6.2). 63% female. 42% living alone. | 29% reported fall(s) in the past 6 months and 16% reported fall(s) in the past month. | FES-I; single question, 4-point Likert scale | FOF prevalence: 38%. On FES-I 39% had scores 23+. | See ‘Main Findings’. Fall-related concerns were reported significantly more by female participants. | FES-I scores were associated with functional status (SPPB score), morale (PGCM( |
| Payette | Systematic review and meta-analysis. | Relationship between anxiety and fall-related psychological concerns. | 4738 | Overall mean age = 77.12. | N/A | N/A | N/A | FOF was correlated with anxiety and falls-efficacy/balance confidence. | FOF was related to anxiety and fall-related psychological concerns with both relationships having medium effect sizes. Anxiety explained 9.77% of FOF variance and 9.86% of falls-efficacy variance. |
| Peeters | Longitudinal observational (4-year period); cross-sectional analyses at baseline. | Association of FOF with measures of global cognition at baseline and at 4 years. | 4931 | Age: 62.9 (9.1). 54.3% female. Collected data on education level. | No FOF: 16.8%, FOF: 32.0% reported fall(s) in the past 12 months. | Single question, yes/no responses | FOF prevalence: 21.9%. | FOF was associated with worse cognition, older age, female sex, previous falls, comorbidities, and disability. | FOF at baseline was associated with decline in MoCA scores and this decline was greater for older participants (75+ vs. <75). |
| Peeters | Longitudinal observational (4-year period). | Influence of FOF at baseline on cognitive test results 4 years later. | 5174 | Age: 62.6 (8.9). 54.5% female. | No FOF: 16.6%, FOF: 31.1% reported fall(s) in the past year. | Single question, yes/no responses | FOF prevalence: 20.6%. | FOF was associated with older age, female sex, previous falls, depression, anxiety, co-morbidities, and disability. | FOF was associated with declines in delayed recall, colour trails (CCT) 1/2, and verbal fluency in adjusted models, marking decline in executive function. |
| Sakurai | Longitudinal observational (1-year period). | Subjective memory complaints (SMC) at baseline and at 1 year. | 406 | Age: 72.7 (4.9). 56.9% female. 24.9% living alone. Education in years: 12.8 (2.8). | N/A | Single question, yes/no responses | FOF prevalence: 24.6%. | FOF was reported more often by those who also reported SMC overall and at baseline. | FOF was associated with SMC at baseline and with incident SMC in those who did not report it at baseline. |
| Scarlett | Cross-sectional observational | Relationship between FOF and emotional regulation. | 117 | Age: 76 (6.8). 75% female. 100% Caucasian, 100% retired, 72.6% secondary or more education. 42.7% widowed. | 59% fell in previous 5 years (once = 20%, 2+ = 39%). | FES-I; FFABQ | FES-I: 26.73 (10.4). FFABQ: 12.42 (13.3). | FOF (i.e., FES-I, FFABQ scores) was positively correlated with difficulties in emotional regulation (i.e., DERS scores). | FES-I scores related to older age and depression in a significant hierarchical regression model. FFABQ scores in this model were only related to older age. |
| Shirooka | Cross-sectional observational | Association between FOF and cognition in frail vs. non-frail older adults. | 483 | Age: 73.3 (5.1). 68.3% female. 60.8% had 10+ years of education. | 20.3% reported fall(s) in the past year. | Single question with yes/no responses | FOF prevalence: 31.5%. | FOF was associated with older age, female sex, and previous falls. For frail participants, better cognition was associated with FOF. | Cognitive impairment (specifically in MMSE attention and calculation scores) was associated with the absence of FOF in frail older adults. |
| Shoene | Systematic review | Relationship between FOF and QOL. | 29029 | Age: 75.6 (6.1). 78% female. | N/A | N/A | N/A | Lower FOF was associated with higher QOL, independent of FOF measure or previous falls. | FOF associated with lower QOL. FOF should not be considered solely as a byproduct of previous falls. |
| Tomita | Cross-sectional observational | FOF was the dependent variable in this study. | 278 | Age: 72.6 (5.2). 100% female. | 23% reported fall(s) in the previous year. | Single question, yes/no responses | FOF prevalence: 36.3%. | FOF increased non-significantly with older age (75+ vs. 65–74). See ‘Main Findings’. | FOF associated with worse physical performance (i.e., longer five-time chair stand, TUG, and 6-m walking time, weaker grip strength). |
| Tomita | Cross-sectional observational | FOF was the dependent variable in this study. | 844 | Age: males = 70.1 (6.4), females = 69.8 (6.1). 58.5% female. | 16% had fall(s) in the previous year (males: 13.7%, females: 17.6%). | Single question, yes/no responses | Prevalence: 26.9% males, 43.3% females. | FOF associated with older age, female sex, previous falls, lumbar and/or knee pain, co-morbidities, worse five-time chair stand. | FOF associated with older age, previous falls, and lumbar and/or knee pain for both males and females. FOF associated with five-times chair stand time for females. |
| Uemura | Longitudinal observational (15-month period). | Relationship between MCI and the development of FOF over the study period. | 1700 | Age: 70.8 (4.7). 62.1% male. Education, and living arrangement reported by subgroup. | Never FOF: 9.5%, Developed FOF: 26.1% reported fall incidents. | Single question, 4-point Likert scale. | Incidence: 26.5%. | FOF more likely if: older, female, incident falls, low education, low cognition, slower gait and TUG times, depressive symptoms, walking aid use, MCI, and poor self-rated health. | Incident FOF associated with age, female sex, low education, MCI, incident falls, low gait speed, depressive symptoms, and poor self-rated health. |
| Vitorino | Cross-sectional observational | Association between FOF and both demographic and clinical factors. | 170 | Age: 57.1% were 60–69, 42.9% were 70+. 67.6% female. 90.6% had less than 8 years of education. 54.1% married or with a partner. | 76.5% had fall(s) (1 fall: 20%, 2+ falls: 56.5%). 46.1% of reported falls within last year. | FES-I | FES-I: 29.5 (10.2). 66.5% reported high FOF (i.e., 23+ on the FES-I). | See ‘Main Findings’. | FOF associated with older age, female sex, previous falls, and worse self-assessment of health in a multiple linear regression model. The model explained 37% of FOF variance. |
| Vitorino | Cross-sectional observational | FOF compared between the two study sites (i.e., Brazil and Portugal). | 340 | Age: 72.00 (7.69), 74.40% female. 48.20% married or with a partner. | 74.7% reported previous fall(s). 38.5% of reported falls within last year. | FES-I | Prevalence (i.e., FES-I score 23+): 72.4%; Portuguese site 78.2%, Brazil site 66.5%. | See ‘Main Findings’. | FOF associations: Brazil = age 76+, female sex; Portugal = daily medication use, previous falls, vision problems. FES-I scores were higher in Portugal than Brazil. |
All values are numerical counts, percentages or means with standard deviations.
FOF = Fear of Falling; FES = Falls Efficacy Scale;( ABC = Activities-Specific Balance Confidence Scale;( PBF = percent body fat; SF-36 = Short Form Health Survey;( ADL = Activities of Daily Living; TUG = Timed Up and Go Test;( SPPB = Short Physical Performance Battery;( PGCM = Philadelphia Geriatric Center Morale Scale;( MMSE = Mini Mental State Examination;( MoCA = Montreal Cognitive Assessment;( FFABQ = Fear of Falling Avoidance Behavior Questionnaire;( DERS = Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale;( MCI = mild cognitive impairment; BMI = body mass index; QOL = quality of life; DM = diabetes mellitus; PIGD = postural instability/gait disturbance
FIGURE 1Flow diagram of article selection process
Summary of Factors Associated with FOF
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| Socio-demographic | Older Age | Chang,( |
| Female Sex | Auais,( | |
| Lower Education | Chang,( | |
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| Physical Performance | Aibar-Almazan,( | |
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| Health | Comorbidity | Aibar-Almazan,( |
| Sensory Impairment | Choi,( | |
| Falls | Aibar-Almazan,( | |
| Quality of Life | Bjerk,( | |
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| Psychological | Mood/Emotion | Aibar-Almazan,( |
| Cognition | Choi,( | |
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| ||
| Social/Environmental | Auais,( | |
Non-significant association.