The Associations of Joint Exposure to Various Living Environmental Factors With the Risk of Frailty and All-cause Mortality: A Nationally Representative Cohort Study.

J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci

Beijing Key Laboratory of Environment and Aging, Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics, School of Public Health, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China.

Published: June 2025


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Background: The relationships of joint exposure to various outdoor and indoor environmental factors with the risk of frailty and mortality remain unclear.

Methods: Based on the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, we enrolled 13 745 participants in the final analysis. The living environmental score incorporated 7 factors: ambient fine particulate matter, residential greenness, household fuel use, indoor temperature, water sources, building types, and household cleanliness (ranged from 0 to 8). Frailty was assessed by a 40-item deficit-accumulation frailty index. Cox proportional hazards regressions were used to assess the longitudinal associations of individual and joint exposure to living environmental factors with risk of frailty and mortality.

Results: In this prospective study, 3 389 participants developed frailty and 815 died during a 7-year follow-up. A higher living environmental score was linked to reduced risks of frailty (hazard ratio: 0.872, 95% CI: 0.854-0.890) and mortality (hazard ratio: 0.893, 95% CI: 0.856-0.932). Population-attributable fraction analyses revealed that 23.5% of frailty and 17.2% of deaths could be attributed to lower living environmental scores. For single factors, solid fuel use and PM2.5 exposure had the greatest attribution to incident frailty and all-cause mortality, respectively. The effects of low living environmental score on all-cause mortality were mediated via frailty.

Conclusions: Multiple living environmental risk factors were separately and jointly associated with increased risks of frailty and mortality in an additive manner, emphasizing the importance of comprehensively assessing various environmental factors to promote healthy aging.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gerona/glaf102DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

living environmental
28
environmental factors
16
joint exposure
12
factors risk
12
risk frailty
12
all-cause mortality
12
environmental score
12
frailty
10
environmental
9
exposure living
8

Similar Publications

Background: Fish are the largest group of vertebrates. Studying the characteristics, functions, and interactions of different fish cells is important for understanding their roles in disease and evolution. However, most single cell RNA-seq studies in fish are restricted to a few specific organs, leaving a comprehensive cell landscape that aims to characterize the heterogeneity and connections among body-wide organs largely unexplored.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Patients' sense of safety and well-being may be affected in numerous ways while being cared for in hospitals. Often, feelings of alienation arise, as private spaces like the home are inaccessible. One aspect that impacts patients' safety and well-being is the design of the physical care environment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Carbonaceous asteroids are the source of the most primitive meteorites and represent leftover planetesimals that formed from ice and dust in the outer Solar System and may have delivered volatiles to the terrestrial planets. Understanding the aqueous activity of asteroids is key to deciphering their thermal, chemical and orbital evolution, with implications for the origin of water on the terrestrial planets. Analyses of the objects, in particular pristine samples returned from asteroid Ryugu, have provided detailed information on fluid-rock interactions within a few million years after parent-body formation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: In 2021, Dr Kalra embraced an opportunity for a leadership role at a start-up healthcare organisation in India. This gave him an opportunity to adapt his National Health Service (NHS) leadership experience to the evolving Indian private healthcare landscape. This paper shares his lived experience as a National Medical Director and delves into the experiences and leadership insights he acquired during this.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Comparison of resistance training among individuals living with diabetes, prediabetes, and without diabetes: 2017-2023 BRFSS.

Prim Care Diabetes

September 2025

Department of Health Sciences and Human Performance Department, College of Natural and Health Sciences, The University of Tampa, Tamp, FL, USA. Electronic address:

Aim: This study aims to compare the weekly resistance training (RT) frequency between people with diabetes, prediabetes, and without diabetes.

Methods: A total of 536,703 participants from 2017 to 2023 Behavioral Risk Factors Surveillance System were included in the analysis. Unadjusted and adjusted Poisson regression was performed to compare weekly resistance training frequency among participants with different diabetes statuses (without diabetes, prediabetes, and with diabetes).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF