Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge Strangeways Laboratory, Worts Causeway, Cambridge CB1 8RN, UK.
BMC Geriatr. 2013 Aug 22;13:85. doi: 10.1186/1471-2318-13-85.
Poor self-rated health has been associated with poorer objective health outcomes across a range of conditions including stroke. Identification of factors associated with poor self-rated health in stroke survivors has received little attention compared to that in other older individuals. This study identifies determinants of self-rated health in older individuals with or without a history of stroke participating in the population-representative MRC Cognitive Function and Aging Study (MRC CFAS).
The MRC CFAS is a multicentred longitudinal survey of a population representative sample of people in their 65th year and older at baseline. Baseline interview included questions about functional disability, psychiatric history, independent living status, social interactions, and cognitive function. Multiple logistic regression was used to determine associations between demographic, physical, cognitive, psychological and social factors with poor self-rated health among those with and without stroke.
After excluding those with impaired cognitive function, 776 individuals out of 11,957 reported a stroke. Factors associated with self-rated health were similar between those with or without a stroke in older individuals. Poorer self-rated health in those who had suffered a stroke was associated predominantly with the presence of comorbidity with diabetes (OR 3.5; 95% CI 1.5-8.1) and not "getting out and about" (OR 2.6; 95% CI 1.7-4.1) even after adjustment for disability levels and for depression. In those without a stroke the most important determinants were disability (OR 3.9; 95% CI 3.2-4.8) and not "getting out and about" (OR 2.9; 95% CI 2.5-3.3). The presence of disability was less strongly associated with poor self-rated health in those with a history of stroke than those without due to a substantially higher reporting of poor self-rated health in the non-disabled stroke group than the non-disabled stroke-free group, while those with disabilities reported poor self-rated health irrespective of stroke status.
Self-rated health is determined by a range of psychological and social factors in addition to disability in older patients with stroke. Addressing social integration and mobility out of the home is an important element of rehabilitation for older people with stroke as well as those without.
在一系列疾病中,包括中风,自我评估健康状况不佳与较差的客观健康结果相关。与其他老年人相比,中风幸存者中与自我评估健康状况不佳相关的因素受到的关注较少。本研究旨在确定参与具有代表性的 MRC 认知功能和老龄化研究(MRC CFAS)的老年人中有无中风史的个体的自我评估健康状况的决定因素。
MRC CFAS 是一项多中心纵向调查,研究对象为基线时 65 岁及以上的人群代表性样本。基线访谈包括有关功能障碍、精神病史、独立生活状况、社会交往和认知功能的问题。采用多因素逻辑回归分析确定在有无中风的个体中,人口统计学、身体、认知、心理和社会因素与自我评估健康状况不良之间的关联。
在排除认知功能受损者后,11957 名参与者中有 776 人报告患有中风。在老年人中,无论有无中风,与自我评估健康状况相关的因素相似。与无中风者相比,患有中风者的自我评估健康状况较差,主要与合并糖尿病有关(OR 3.5;95%CI 1.5-8.1),而与活动受限无关(OR 2.6;95%CI 1.7-4.1),即使在调整残疾程度和抑郁状况后也是如此。在无中风者中,最重要的决定因素是残疾(OR 3.9;95%CI 3.2-4.8)和活动受限(OR 2.9;95%CI 2.5-3.3)。由于在无残疾的中风组中,自我评估健康状况不佳的报告明显高于无残疾的非中风组,因此与无中风者相比,患有中风者的残疾与自我评估健康状况不佳的相关性较弱,而无论是否患有中风,残疾者都报告自我评估健康状况不佳。
除了残疾之外,心理和社会因素也会影响老年中风患者的自我评估健康状况。解决社会融合和走出家门的流动性是中风患者以及无中风患者康复的重要组成部分。