Skip to main content

Health related quality of life in men with fractures and fear of falling in general population. Cross-sectional study

Zwart M, Azagra-Ledesma R, Díaz-Herrera MA, Pujol J, Saez M, Aguyé-Batista A. Journal of Clinical Medicine 2025; 14(3): 925. doi: 10.3390/jcm14030925 (Impact Factor: 2.900, MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL 65/332 Q1)

See article

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to assess how fractures and fear of falling affect health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in men (≥50 years) across different domains. 

Methods 

Design: Observational study. Setting: Primary care. Subjects: 237 men aged 50–90 years. Outcome measures: Age, frac-tures, fear of falling, EQ-5D. 

Results 

A total of 122 men (51.47% of the male cohort) participated, the mean age was 69 ± 5 (≥65–74 years 26.2%, ≥75–84 years 21.3%, ≥85 years 9.8%). Poorer EQ-5D scores were observed in men ≥ 65 years with fractures in the pain domain (p = 0.04), while men < 65 showed better scores in mobility (p = 0.04), self-care (p = 0.04), daily activities (p = 0.04), and anxiety/depression (p = 0.01). Fear of falling significantly impacted HRQoL across all ages, with men ≥ 65 reporting worse mobility (p = 0.02) and higher anxiety/depression (p = 0.01), while men < 65 experienced less pain (p = 0.00). 

Conclusions 

This study shows a relationship between frac-tures, fear of falling, and the perception of the various dimensions of HRQoL in older men. It highlights the need for targeted interventions and follow-up systems to monitor recovery and address fears of falling in men aged 65 and above post-fracture.

See article