INVESTIGADORES
PRIETO FLORES MarÍa Eugenia
artículos
Título:
Health status and wellbeing of older adults living in the community and in residential care settings: Are differences influenced by age?
Autor/es:
RODRIGUEZ-BLAZQUEZ, C.; FORJAZ, M.J.; PRIETO FLORES, M.E.; ROJO-PEREZ, F.; FERNANDEZ-MAYORALAS, G.; MARTINEZ-MARTIN, P.
Revista:
AGING AND MENTAL HEALTH
Editorial:
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2012
ISSN:
1360-7863
Resumen:
The objective is to identify the differences and the main factors influencing health status and well-being variables between institutionalized and non-institutionalized older adults, as well as the interaction effect of institutionalization and age. Data on a total of 468 older adults from a national survey on non-institutionalized and from a study on institutionalized older people were analyzed. Socio-demographic variables and measures onwell-being (Personal Well-being Index, PWI), health status (EQ-5D), functional ability (Barthel Index), depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale-Depression subscale), loneliness and comorbidity were used. Analysis of variance and Kruskal?Wallis tests to examine differences between groups and multiple regression analyses to identify factors associated to health and well-being were performed. Significant differences in healthstatus variables, but not in well-being were detected between groups. Controlling for age, differences in health status (EQ-VAS) were found to be not significant in both groups. In the non-institutionalized group, people aged 78 years or more reported a significantly lower well-being (PWI) than younger counterparts. Step-wise multipleregression analysis showed that depression, functional dependence, loneliness and sex were associated with health status; while depression, health status, loneliness and the interaction of age-institutionalization were related to well-being. The results suggest that age influences community-dwelling older adults? well-being to a greater extentthan it does to institutionalized older people. This finding has implications for resource allocation and interventions addressed to improve health and well-being in older adults.