Association Between Hearing Difficulty and Mobility in Adults of All Ages: National Health Interview Survey

Author:

Joo Henry H.1ORCID,Huang Emily Y.1,Schoo Desi2,Ward Bryan2,Chen Jenny X.2

Affiliation:

1. Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA

2. Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery Johns Hopkins Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo investigate the relationship between hearing difficulty and measures of mobility for US adults.Study DesignCross‐sectional study.Setting2021 National Health Interview Survey.MethodsThe survey asked US adults about hearing difficulty and mobility measures, including difficulty walking 100 yards, difficulty climbing 12 steps, and injury from falling within the past 3 months. Multivariable logistic regressions examined the associations between hearing and mobility outcomes, controlling for visual difficulty, medical comorbidities, and various demographic characteristics (age [18‐39, 40‐64, 65+], race/ethnicity, sex, socioeconomic status).ResultsThe 2021 NHIS surveyed 29,467 adults, representing 253 million people in weighted responses (52% female; mean age 48.3, standard deviation = 18.6). Controlling for covariates, hearing difficulty was associated with increased odds of difficulty walking 100 yards (odds ratio, OR = 1.47, P < .001), difficulty climbing stairs (OR = 1.62, P < .001), and injury from falling in the past 3 months (OR = 1.51, P < .001). There was a significant interaction between age and hearing difficulty for injurious falls; stratifying by age revealed that younger adults (ages 18‐39) with hearing difficulty were more likely to report recent harmful falls than their normal hearing peers; this increased risk was greater in magnitude than that observed comparing older adults with and without hearing difficulty.ConclusionThe hearing difficulty is associated with worsened mobility for US adults and may be a stronger independent predictor of injury from falls for younger adults as compared to older adults. These findings can inform interventions to reduce the burden of declining mobility in adults with hearing difficulty.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,Surgery

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