配偶
日常生活活动
老年学
心理健康
纵向研究
医学
萧条(经济学)
一致性
检查表
心理学
精神科
病理
认知心理学
经济
社会学
宏观经济学
内科学
人类学
作者
Xiaoke Zhao,Danyu Li,Quan Zhang,Huiying Liu
摘要
To examine the joint effects of self and spousal frailty status on functional and mental health in Chinese older adults and determine whether such effects vary by urban versus rural residency.Frailty is a clinical syndrome among old adults and would lead to adverse outcomes. However, studies on the interactive patterns of frailty status between spouses and the joint effects of such patterns on health outcomes are scarce.Data were from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS). A total of 2,581 married seniors who participated both 2011 and 2015 waves of the CHARLS were categorised into four groups: robust self-robust spouse (RR), robust self-frail spouse (RF), frail self-robust spouse (FR) and frail self-frail spouse (FF).Frailty was measured using the physical frailty phenotype scale. Depressive symptoms were measured using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CESD). Functional health was measured by difficulties in activities of daily living (ADL) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL). The generalised estimating equation was used to estimate the effects of concordant frailty on mental and functional outcomes, stratified by rural/urban residency. This study followed the STROBE checklist.The FF group reported higher levels of ADL/IADL difficulties and depressive symptoms at follow-up than the RR group; urban individuals in the RF group reported higher follow-up depression than the RR group; and rural individuals from the FR or RF groups reported more follow-up ADL/IADL difficulties than the RR group.Frailty and subsequent health decline are interdependent in older couples, and the rural/urban context is important for understanding this interdependence in the older Chinese population.Couples-based intervention strategies are needed to tackle situations in which one or both spouses are concurrently facing frailty.
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