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Spousal bereavement and its effects on later life physical and cognitive capability: the Tromsø study

  • Bjørn Heine Strand
  • , Asta K. Håberg
  • , Harpa Sif Eyjólfsdóttir
  • , Almar Kok
  • , Vegard Skirbekk
  • , Oliver Huxhold
  • , Gøril Kvamme Løset
  • , Carin Lennartsson
  • , Henrik Schirmer
  • , Katharina Herlofson
  • , Marijke Veenstra

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Spousal bereavement is associated with health declines and increased mortality risk, but its specific impact on physical and cognitive capabilities is less studied. A historical cohort study design was applied including married Tromsø study participants (N=5739) aged 50–70 years with baseline self-reported overall health and health-related factors and measured capability (grip strength, finger tapping, digit symbol coding, and short-term recall) at follow-up. Participants had data from Tromsø4 (1994–1995) and Tromsø5 (2001), or Tromsø6 (2007–2008) and Tromsø7 (2015–2016). Propensity score matching, adjusted for baseline confounders (and baseline capability in a subset), was used to investigate whether spousal bereavement was associated with poorer subsequent capability. Spousal bereavement occurred for 6.2% on average 3.7 years (SD 2.0) before the capability assessment. There were no significant bereavement effects on subsequent grip strength, immediate recall, or finger-tapping speed. Without adjustment for baseline digit symbol coding test performance, there was a negative significant effect on the digit symbol coding test (ATT −1.33; 95% confidence interval −2.57, −0.10), but when baseline digit symbol coding test performance was taken into account in a smaller subsample, using the same set of matching confounders, there was no longer any association (in the subsample ATT changed from −1.29 (95% CI −3.38, 0.80) to −0.04 (95% CI −1.83, 1.75). The results in our study suggest that spousal bereavement does not have long-term effects on the intrinsic capacity components physical or cognition capability to a notable degree.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6055-6069
JournalGeroScience
Volume46
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2024
Externally publishedYes

Funding

Open access funding provided by Norwegian Institute of Public Health (FHI) This study is part of the project Inequalities in ageing well and the significance of transitions in later life (TRILL) funded by the Research Council of Norway (grant number 301958).

FundersFunder number
Norwegian Institute of Public Health
Norges forskningsråd301958

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