Trends in grip strength: Age, period, and cohort effects on grip strength in older adults from Germany, Sweden, and Spain

Grip strength is seen as an objective indicator of morbidity and disability. However, empirical knowledge about trends in grip strength remains incomplete. As trends can occur due to effects of aging, time periods and birth cohorts, we used hierarchical age-period-cohort models to estimate and disen...

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Main Authors: Johannes Beller, Alexander Miething, Enrique Regidor, Lourdes Lostao, Jelena Epping, Siegfried Geyer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-12-01
Series:SSM: Population Health
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827319300175
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spelling doaj-9588ce7aa9844fa3bd7a3bc921732f702020-11-25T01:25:21ZengElsevierSSM: Population Health2352-82732019-12-019Trends in grip strength: Age, period, and cohort effects on grip strength in older adults from Germany, Sweden, and SpainJohannes Beller0Alexander Miething1Enrique Regidor2Lourdes Lostao3Jelena Epping4Siegfried Geyer5Hannover Medical School, Medical Sociology Unit, Germany; Corresponding author. Hannover Medical School, Center for Public Health and Health Care, Medical Sociology Unit, Carl-Neuberg-Str. 1, 30625, Hannover, Germany.Stockholm University, Department of Public Health Sciences, SwedenComplutense University of Madrid, Department of Public Health & Maternal and Child Health, Spain; CIBER Epidemiología y Salud Pública (CIBERESP), SpainPublic University of Navarre, Department of Medical Sociology, SpainHannover Medical School, Medical Sociology Unit, GermanyHannover Medical School, Medical Sociology Unit, GermanyGrip strength is seen as an objective indicator of morbidity and disability. However, empirical knowledge about trends in grip strength remains incomplete. As trends can occur due to effects of aging, time periods and birth cohorts, we used hierarchical age-period-cohort models to estimate and disentangle putative changes in grip strength. To do this, we used population-based data of older adults, aged 50 years and older, from Germany, Sweden, and Spain from the SHARE study (N = 22500) that encompassed multiple waves of first-time respondents. We found that there were contrasting changes for different age groups: Grip strength improved over time periods for the oldest old, whereas it stagnated or even decreased in younger older adults. Importantly, we found strong birth cohort effects on grip strength: In German older adults, birth cohorts in the wake of the Second World War exhibited increasingly reduced grip strength, and in Spanish older adults, the last birth cohort born after 1960 experienced a sharp drop in grip strength. Therefore, while grip strength increased in the oldest old aged 80 years and older, grip strength stagnated or decreased in comparatively younger cohorts, who might thus be at risk to experience more morbidity and disability in the future than previous generations. Future studies should investigate factors that contribute to this trend, the robustness of the observed birth cohort effects, and the generalizability of our results to other indicators of functional health. Keywords: Grip strength, Morbidity, Trend, Compression, Expansionhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827319300175
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johannes Beller
Alexander Miething
Enrique Regidor
Lourdes Lostao
Jelena Epping
Siegfried Geyer
spellingShingle Johannes Beller
Alexander Miething
Enrique Regidor
Lourdes Lostao
Jelena Epping
Siegfried Geyer
Trends in grip strength: Age, period, and cohort effects on grip strength in older adults from Germany, Sweden, and Spain
SSM: Population Health
author_facet Johannes Beller
Alexander Miething
Enrique Regidor
Lourdes Lostao
Jelena Epping
Siegfried Geyer
author_sort Johannes Beller
title Trends in grip strength: Age, period, and cohort effects on grip strength in older adults from Germany, Sweden, and Spain
title_short Trends in grip strength: Age, period, and cohort effects on grip strength in older adults from Germany, Sweden, and Spain
title_full Trends in grip strength: Age, period, and cohort effects on grip strength in older adults from Germany, Sweden, and Spain
title_fullStr Trends in grip strength: Age, period, and cohort effects on grip strength in older adults from Germany, Sweden, and Spain
title_full_unstemmed Trends in grip strength: Age, period, and cohort effects on grip strength in older adults from Germany, Sweden, and Spain
title_sort trends in grip strength: age, period, and cohort effects on grip strength in older adults from germany, sweden, and spain
publisher Elsevier
series SSM: Population Health
issn 2352-8273
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Grip strength is seen as an objective indicator of morbidity and disability. However, empirical knowledge about trends in grip strength remains incomplete. As trends can occur due to effects of aging, time periods and birth cohorts, we used hierarchical age-period-cohort models to estimate and disentangle putative changes in grip strength. To do this, we used population-based data of older adults, aged 50 years and older, from Germany, Sweden, and Spain from the SHARE study (N = 22500) that encompassed multiple waves of first-time respondents. We found that there were contrasting changes for different age groups: Grip strength improved over time periods for the oldest old, whereas it stagnated or even decreased in younger older adults. Importantly, we found strong birth cohort effects on grip strength: In German older adults, birth cohorts in the wake of the Second World War exhibited increasingly reduced grip strength, and in Spanish older adults, the last birth cohort born after 1960 experienced a sharp drop in grip strength. Therefore, while grip strength increased in the oldest old aged 80 years and older, grip strength stagnated or decreased in comparatively younger cohorts, who might thus be at risk to experience more morbidity and disability in the future than previous generations. Future studies should investigate factors that contribute to this trend, the robustness of the observed birth cohort effects, and the generalizability of our results to other indicators of functional health. Keywords: Grip strength, Morbidity, Trend, Compression, Expansion
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827319300175
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