Research Centre for Gender Health & Ageing, Faculty of Health, University of Newcastle, Callaghan 2308, Australia.
Int J Equity Health. 2012 Sep 8;11:52. doi: 10.1186/1475-9276-11-52.
Women represent a growing proportion of older people and experience increasing disability in their longer lives. Using a universally agreed definition of disability based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health, this paper examines how, apart from age, social and economic factors contribute to disability differences between older men and women.
World Health Survey data were analyzed from 57 countries drawn from all income groups defined by the World Bank. The final sample comprises 63638 respondents aged 50 and older (28568 males and 35070 females). Item Response Theory was applied to derive a measure of disability which ensured cross country comparability. Individuals with scores at or above a threshold score were those who experienced significant difficulty in their everyday lives, irrespective of the underlying etiology. The population was then divided into "disabled" vs. "not disabled". We firstly computed disability prevalence for males and females by socio-demographic factors, secondly used multiple logistic regression to estimate the adjusted effects of each social determinant on disability for males and females, and thirdly used a variant of the Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition technique to partition the measured inequality in disability between males and females into the "explained" part that arises because of differences between males and females in terms of age and social and economic characteristics, and an "unexplained" part attributed to the differential effects of these characteristics.
Prevalence of disability among women compared with men aged 50+ years was 40.1% vs. 23.8%. Lower levels of education and economic status are associated with disability in women and men. Approximately 45% of the sex inequality in disability can be attributed to differences in the distribution of socio-demographic factors. Approximately 55% of the inequality results from differences in the effects of the determinants.
There is an urgent need for data and methodologies that can identify how social, biological and other factors separately contribute to the health decrements facing men and women as they age. This study highlights the need for action to address social structures and institutional practices that impact unfairly on the health of older men and women.
女性在老年人中所占比例不断增加,并且在其更长的寿命中经历着日益增加的残疾。本文使用基于《国际功能、残疾和健康分类》的普遍认同的残疾定义,研究了除年龄以外的社会和经济因素如何导致男女老年人之间的残疾差异。
分析了来自世界银行定义的所有收入组别的 57 个国家的世界卫生调查数据。最终样本包括 63638 名 50 岁及以上的受访者(男性 28568 名,女性 35070 名)。应用项目反应理论得出残疾衡量标准,以确保跨国可比。得分等于或高于阈值得分的个人被认为在日常生活中存在严重困难,无论其潜在病因如何。然后,将人群分为“残疾”和“非残疾”。我们首先按社会人口因素计算男性和女性的残疾患病率,其次使用多变量逻辑回归估计每个社会决定因素对男性和女性残疾的调整影响,然后使用 Blinder-Oaxaca 分解技术的变体将男性和女性残疾之间的测量不平等分为“可解释”部分,这是由于男女在年龄和社会经济特征方面的差异引起的,以及“不可解释”部分归因于这些特征的差异影响。
与 50 岁及以上的男性相比,女性的残疾患病率为 40.1%对 23.8%。较低的教育水平和经济地位与女性和男性的残疾有关。残疾性别不平等的约 45%可以归因于社会人口因素分布的差异。大约 55%的不平等源于决定因素的影响差异。
迫切需要数据和方法来确定社会、生物和其他因素如何分别导致男性和女性随着年龄增长而健康状况下降。本研究强调需要采取行动来解决影响男女老年人健康的不公平的社会结构和机构做法。