Allostatic Load, Morbidity, and Mortality Among Older Adults: A Multi-Wave Analysis From the National Health and Aging Trends Study.
Carri S PolickMelissa L Harris-GerstenPaul A DennisDevon NoonanSusan N HastingsPatrick S CalhounMarie Anne RosembergSarah A StoddardPublished in: Journal of applied gerontology : the official journal of the Southern Gerontological Society (2024)
Although allostatic load (AL) is a key concept to reflect physiologic wear and tear from stress, older adults are underrepresented in AL-related research, especially the oldest old (≥80). Further, attenuative factors are often unaccounted for. This longitudinal analysis using data from National Health and Aging Trends Study investigated relationships of AL in 2017 and multi-wave (1) comorbidity accumulation using multilevel Poisson modeling and (2) mortality risk using survival analysis. By year five (2022), each incremental AL increase that older adults ( n = 3614) experienced was associated with a 47% increase in comorbidity ( p < .001), and a 33% increased mortality risk ( p < .001). This research supports a shift to a more proactive, health promotion/risk mitigation paradigm through informing intervention research targeting AL, which is currently scarce. Identifying potentially modifiable and key driving factors influencing the relationship between AL and health among older adults is an important next step to inform intervention design.