The association amongst visual, hearing, and dual sensory loss with depression and anxiety over 6 years: The Tromso Study

Objective: To examine the longitudinal association of dual and single (vision and hearing) sensory loss on symptoms of depression and anxiety in older adults. Methods: Two thousand eight hundred ninety adults aged 60 years or over who participated in the longitudinal population-based Tromso Study, N...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cosh, S, School of Psychology, orcid:0000-0002-8003-3704, von Hanno, T, Helmer, C, Bertelsen, G, Delcourt, C, Schirmer, H, Cougnard‐Gregoire, Audrey, Dawes, Piers, Constantinidou, Fofi, Ikram, M Arfan, Klaver, Caroline C W, Leroi, Iracema, Maharani, Asri, Meester‐Smor, Magda, Mutlu, Unal, Nael, Virginie, Pendleton, Neil, Tampubolon, Gindo, Tiemeier, Henning
Other Authors: SENSE-Cog
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: John Wiley & Sons Ltd 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/26960
Description
Summary:Objective: To examine the longitudinal association of dual and single (vision and hearing) sensory loss on symptoms of depression and anxiety in older adults. Methods: Two thousand eight hundred ninety adults aged 60 years or over who participated in the longitudinal population-based Tromso Study, Norway, were included. The impact of objective vision loss, self-report hearing loss, or dual sensory loss on symptoms of depression and anxiety, as assessed by the Hopkins Symptom Checklist 10, was examined at baseline and 6-year follow-up using linear mixed models. Results: Hearing loss had a cross-sectional relationship with increased depression (b = 0.1750, SE = 0.07, P = .02) and anxiety symptoms (b = 0.1765, SE = 0.08, P = .03); however, these relationships were not significant at the 6-year follow-up. Both vision loss only and dual sensory loss predicted increased depression scores at follow-up (b = 0.0220, SE = 0.01, P = .03; and b = 0.0413, SE = 0.02, P = .01, respectively). Adjustment for social isolation did not attenuate the main depression results. Conclusion: Dual sensory loss resulted in increased depression symptomatology over time and posed an additional long-term risk to depression severity beyond having a single sensory loss only. Only hearing loss is associated with anxiety symptoms. Older adults with vision, hearing, and dual sensory loss have different mental health profiles. Therefore, management and intervention should be tailored to the type of sensory loss.