Objectives: To determine the relationships between visual and hearing impairment and subsequent functional dependence and mortality among community-dwelling older persons.
Design: A Prospective, cohort study.
Setting: Community-based.
Participants: A total of 5444 men and women aged 55 to 74 years at baseline.
Measurements: Self-reported and measured visual impairment, self-reported and measured hearing impairment, self-reported and measured combined sensory impairment, 10-year mortality, and dependency in activities of daily living (ADL), instrumental ADL (IADL), and Rosow-Breslau (RB) function.
Results: In multiply-adjusted models, adjusting for length of follow-up, socio-demographic characteristics, and chronic conditions, only measured visual impairment was predictive of mortality. Measured visual impairment was also predictive of 10-year ADL and IADL dependence; measured hearing impairment was predictive of RB dependence. Self-reported visual impairment predicted functional impairment on all scales at 10 years, although self-reported hearing impairment predicted only subsequent RB dependence. Measured combined impairment was associated with the highest risk of 10-year functional dependence.
Conclusions: Sensory impairment is predictive of subsequent functional impairment in older persons.