Correlates of attributing new disability to old age

Citation
Ca. Sarkisian et al., Correlates of attributing new disability to old age, J AM GER SO, 49(2), 2001, pp. 134-141
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science","General & Internal Medicine
Journal title
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
ISSN journal
00028614 → ACNP
Volume
49
Issue
2
Year of publication
2001
Pages
134 - 141
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-8614(200102)49:2<134:COANDT>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe women who attribute new disability to old age and t o identify demographic, medical, behavioral, and psychosocial characteristi cs that correlate with attributing new disability to old age. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study with 4-year follow-up. SETTING: Four geographic regions of the United States. PARTICIPANTS: 9704 women aged greater than or equal to 67 years participati ng in the Study of Osteoporotic Fractures. Of these, 657 who reported no di sability at baseline but at followup reported difficulty carrying out 1 or more of 13 functional activities were eligible for our analysis. MEASUREMENTS: All women reporting difficulty in any functional activity at follow-up were asked "What is the main condition that causes you to have di fficulty or prevents you from (doing the activity)?" and were shown a card listing 14 medical conditions as well as the option "old age," from which t hey could choose only one response. Women attributing difficulty or inabili ty in 1 or more functional activities to old age were classified as attribu ting new disability to old age. We examined the relationship between attrib uting new disability to old age and the following characteristics measured at baseline: age, level of education, medical comorbidity, cognitive functi on, body mass index (BMI), gait speed, grip strength, visual acuity, physic al activity level, smoking status, social network level, and depressed mood . RESULTS: Overall, 13.5% of women attributed new disability to old age. Age was a strong independent correlate of attributing new disability to old age : compared with women age 67 to 69, the odds of attributing new disability to old age for women age 70 to 79 was 3.6 times as large (95% confidence in terval [CI] = 1.6-8.3), and for women age 80 or over was 5.5 times as large (95% CI = 2,1-14.7). The only other characteristic that remained an indepe ndent correlate of attributing new disability to old age was grip strength; for each decile decrease in grip strength, a woman's odds of attributing n ew disability to old age increased by 9% (odds ratio [OR] = 1.09, 95% CI = 1.01-1.19). CONCLUSIONS: Despite great advances in geriatric medicine, old age is still perceived as a causal agent in functional decline, especially among our ol dest patients. Further study is needed to determine whether, how often, and under what circumstances older adults who attribute new disability to old age have medical conditions amenable to interventions that could preserve t heir functioning and improve their quality of life.