Hays Judith C, Schoenfeld David E, Blazer Dan G
Departments of Internal Medicine and Psychiatry, Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development, Duke University Medical Center.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 1996;4(3):188-196. doi: 10.1097/00019442-199622430-00002. Epub 2012 Aug 14.
The authors examined the determinants of poor self-rated health by use of data from the Duke University site of the Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly (EPESE). Study participants were community residents, 65 years of age or older, selected from five contiguous counties in the north-central Piedmont area of North Carolina. Poorer self-rated health was correlated cross-sectionally with depressive symptomatology, poor functional status, chronic disease, lower income, less education, being married, younger age, being hospitalized within the past year, and current smoking habit. The authors emphasize the importance of a comprehensive model for understanding the components of the construct of self-rated health and propose possible explanations for the significant correlates of self-rated health.
作者利用来自杜克大学老年人流行病学研究既定人群(EPESE)的数据,研究了自评健康状况不佳的决定因素。研究参与者为65岁及以上的社区居民,选自北卡罗来纳州皮埃蒙特地区中北部五个相邻的县。自评健康状况较差与抑郁症状、功能状态不佳、慢性病、低收入、受教育程度较低、已婚、年龄较轻、过去一年内住院以及当前吸烟习惯呈横断面相关。作者强调了一个综合模型对于理解自评健康这一概念组成部分的重要性,并对自评健康的显著相关因素提出了可能的解释。