一线希望:美国老年人无残疾生活改善十年(2008-2017)

Deirdre Kelly-Adams , Esme Fuller-Thomson
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摘要

最近的研究表明,美国老年人中多种残疾的患病率有所下降。人们对美国老年人无残疾生活的时间趋势知之甚少。本研究旨在:(1)检测65岁以上美国人无残疾患病率和几率的时间趋势;2)确定这些时间趋势是否因性别和年龄队列(65-74岁)而异;75 - 84;85岁及以上);3)考察这些时间趋势是否会因受教育程度的代际差异而减弱。我们对美国社区调查的10年年度全国代表性数据进行了二次分析,其中包括540万社区居住和机构老年人。如果没有严重的记忆问题、听力问题、严重的视力问题、日常生活活动受限(如洗澡、穿衣)或功能受限(如行走、爬楼梯),则被定义为无残疾。2008年至2017年,美国65岁及以上人口中无残疾的比例从60.8%上升到64.9%。如果患病率保持在2008年的水平,2017年将有207万美国老年人患有一种或多种残疾。在过去十年中,女性(26%)比男性(18%)在消除残疾方面的进步更高。这种改善在很大程度上是由于教育水平的提高。婴儿潮一代(65-74岁)的改善程度要比年龄更大的人群温和得多。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The silver lining: A decade of improvement in disability-free living among older Americans (2008–2017)
Recent research indicates that there has been a decline in the prevalence of many types of disabilities among older Americans. Less is known about temporal trends in disability-free life among older Americans. This study aims to: (1) detect temporal trends in the prevalence and odds of being free of disabilities among Americans aged 65+; 2) establish if these temporal trends differ by gender and age cohort (65–74; 75–84; 85 and older); 3) examine if these temporal trends are attenuated by generational differences in educational attainment. We conducted a secondary analysis of 10 years of annual nationally representative data from the American Community Survey with 5.4 million community-dwelling and institutionalized older adults. Individuals were defined as free from disability if they did not have serious memory problems, hearing problems, serious vision problems, limitations in activities of daily living (i.e., bathing, dressing), or functional limitations (i.e., walking, climbing stairs). The prevalence of being free of all disabilities among the US population aged 65 and older increased from 60.8 % to 64.9 % between 2008 and 2017. Had the prevalence remained at the 2008 levels, there would have been an additional 2.07 million older Americans living with one or more disabilities in 2017. The improvements in the odds of being free of disabilities across the decade was higher for women (26 %) than for men (18 %). Much of the improvement was due to higher levels of education. Improvements among baby boomers (aged 65–74) were much more modest than among older cohorts.
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