Angel Jacqueline L, Angel Ronald J, Aranda Maria P, Miles Toni P
Center on Health and Social Policy, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
J Aging Health. 2004 Jun;16(3):338-54. doi: 10.1177/0898264304264203.
This article examines the impact of disability, cognitive status, and social support on nursing home use in a sample of older Mexican Americans.
We used four waves of the Hispanic Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly (H-EPESE), a longitudinal study of 3,050 older Mexican Americans living in the Southwest initially contacted in 1993 to 1994.
The findings reveal that advanced age, being a man, activities of daily living disability, and cognitive impairment are strong predictors of institutionalization and death. Living with family, arriving in the United States in late life, and access to social support independently decreased the probability of dying in a nursing home.
Although it is clear that adequate social support can make it possible for an impaired older person to remain in the community serious impairment can eventually overwhelm even a supportive network and result in the institutionalization of an impaired older person.
本文考察了残疾、认知状况和社会支持对墨西哥裔美国老年人样本中养老院使用情况的影响。
我们使用了西班牙裔老年人流行病学研究的四轮数据(H-EPESE),这是一项对3050名居住在西南部的墨西哥裔美国老年人进行的纵向研究,最初于1993年至1994年进行接触。
研究结果显示,高龄、男性、日常生活活动残疾和认知障碍是机构化和死亡的有力预测因素。与家人同住、晚年抵达美国以及获得社会支持分别降低了在养老院死亡的可能性。
虽然很明显,充足的社会支持可以使受损的老年人留在社区,但严重的损伤最终可能会压垮即使是一个支持性的网络,并导致受损老年人被送进养老院。