Health and Social Sciences, 372463Singapore Institute of Technology, Singapore.
Centre for Ageing Research and Education, Duke-NUS, Singapore.
J Aging Health. 2020 Dec;32(10):1355-1362. doi: 10.1177/0898264320925972. Epub 2020 Jun 16.
Fall prevention strategies informed by understanding sex differences in the perception of falls may be fruitful. In the current research, we examined the consequence of having a recent fall episode on sex differences in fall perception based on the postulation that having a recent fall can lead to perceived susceptibility and attenuate male stereotypic perceptions toward falls. Examining 549 older adults (337 women) living in the community, men reported higher falls efficacy, less negative perception related to the effect of a fall, and lower tendency to restrict activities to prevent falls. These sex differences were observed only among those who did not have a recent fall episode, and no significant sex differences were observed among those who fell. The findings suggest that a recent fall episode may underlie sex differences in falls perception. The implications of sex differences in perceptions in falls for healthcare delivery and outcomes are discussed.
基于了解对跌倒的感知存在性别差异的理念,采取预防跌倒策略可能会卓有成效。在当前研究中,我们基于下述推测,检验了近期跌倒事件对跌倒感知的性别差异的影响,即近期跌倒会导致感知易感性,并削弱男性对跌倒的刻板印象:研究了居住在社区中的 549 名老年人(337 名女性),男性报告称跌倒效能更高,与跌倒后果相关的负面感知更少,为防止跌倒而限制活动的倾向更低。这些性别差异仅在没有近期跌倒事件的人群中观察到,而在跌倒的人群中没有观察到显著的性别差异。研究结果表明,近期跌倒事件可能是跌倒感知性别差异的原因。本文还讨论了跌倒感知方面的性别差异对医疗保健服务提供和结果的影响。