Walter-Ginzburg Adrian, Shmotkin Dov, Blumstein Tzvia, Shorek Aviva
Herczeg Institute on Aging, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Soc Sci Med. 2005 Apr;60(8):1705-15. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.08.023.
The objective was to examine gender differences and similarities in health, function, familial and non-familial social networks; longitudinal resilience in those factors; and their association with risk of mortality in Israeli men and women aged 75-94. We used the Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Aging Study (CALAS), a stratified random sample of 960 Israeli Jews aged 75-94, drawn on January 1, 1989 from National Population Registry, stratified by gender, age (75-79, 80-84, 85-89, 90-94), and place of birth (Europe/America, Middle East/North Africa, Israel), interviewed twice (Wave 1, 1989-1992; Wave 2, 1993-1995); Wave 1 values and longitudinal resilience predicted the 1999 mortality risk for those alive at both waves. Gender differences and similarities were found at Wave 1 in longitudinal resilience and in risk factors for mortality, partially supporting a gender paradox. Men were more physically active, had better cognition, gave more help to children, relied less on paid caretakers, and attended synagogue more than women, factors associated with better health and functioning. Women had poorer health and functional status and more help from children. More physical activity, synagogue attendance, and resilience in activities of daily living (ADL) were associated with lower risk of mortality for both genders. Women's risk of mortality was reduced by smoking reduction and higher cognitive vitality, and men's by emotional support and solitary leisure activity. Both men and women were resilient, yet there were differences. Gender-neutral mortality reduction programs would include physical activity, religious services, maintenance and improvement of ADL, and engaging in solitary leisure activities; for women, smoking cessation and cognitively challenging activities; and for men, maintaining or increasing emotional ties.
目的是研究以色列75至94岁男性和女性在健康、功能、家庭及非家庭社会网络方面的性别差异与相似之处;这些因素的纵向复原力;以及它们与死亡风险的关联。我们使用了横断面和纵向老龄化研究(CALAS),这是一个从国家人口登记处抽取的960名75至94岁以色列犹太人的分层随机样本,按性别、年龄(75至79岁、80至84岁、85至89岁、90至94岁)和出生地(欧洲/美洲、中东/北非、以色列)进行分层,进行了两次访谈(第1波,1989年至1992年;第2波,1993年至1995年);第1波的值和纵向复原力预测了两波均存活者在1999年的死亡风险。在第1波中,发现了纵向复原力和死亡风险因素方面的性别差异与相似之处,部分支持了性别悖论。男性身体更活跃,认知能力更好,给予孩子更多帮助,对付费照顾者的依赖更少,参加犹太教堂活动比女性更多,这些因素与更好的健康和功能相关。女性的健康和功能状况较差,但从孩子那里得到更多帮助。更多的身体活动、参加犹太教堂活动以及日常生活活动(ADL)的复原力与两性较低的死亡风险相关。女性的死亡风险因减少吸烟和更高的认知活力而降低,男性则因情感支持和独自休闲活动而降低。男性和女性都具有复原力,但存在差异。不分性别的降低死亡率项目将包括身体活动、宗教服务、维持和改善ADL以及参与独自休闲活动;对女性来说,戒烟和具有认知挑战性的活动;对男性来说,维持或增加情感联系。