Ageing Research and Development Division, The Institute of Public Health in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
Bamford Centre for Mental Health and Wellbeing, Ulster University, Coleraine, Ireland.
Front Public Health. 2021 May 5;9:620264. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.620264. eCollection 2021.
Few have explored associations between loneliness and healthcare use independent of health and health behaviors. Recent indication of gender effects also requires validation across health service and cultural settings. We investigated the associations among loneliness, health and healthcare use (HCU) in older adults including stratification to investigate whether associations differed by gender. Secondary analysis of a nationally representative sample of 8,309 community-dwelling adults aged 50 and over from the Northern Ireland Cohort for the Longitudinal Study of Aging. Primary outcomes were: self-reported General Practice (GP) and emergency department (ED) visits in past year. Negative binomial and logistic regression analysis were used to investigate associations between loneliness and HCU, later adjusting for potential confounders (health and health behaviors). Loneliness was consistently positively associated with both GP and ED visits (with IRRs ranging from 1.10 to 1.49 for GP visits, 1.16 to 1.98 for ED visits and ORs ranging from 1.13 to 1.51 for reporting at least one ED visit). With addition of health and health behaviors, all associations between loneliness and HCU became non-significant, excepting a small independent association between UCLA score and GP visits [IRR 1.03 (95% CI 1.01-1.05)]. Stratification of models revealed no gender effects. All but one association between loneliness and HCU became non-significant when health and health behaviors were included. The remaining association was small but implications remain for health service resources at population level. No gender effects were present in contrast to recent findings in the Republic of Ireland. Further studies on gender, loneliness and healthcare use needed.
很少有人研究孤独感与医疗保健使用之间的关系,而不考虑健康和健康行为。最近关于性别影响的迹象也需要在卫生服务和文化环境中进行验证。我们调查了老年人孤独感、健康和医疗保健使用(HCU)之间的关联,包括分层调查,以研究这些关联是否因性别而异。这是对北爱尔兰老龄化纵向研究中 8309 名 50 岁及以上社区居民的全国代表性样本进行的二次分析。主要结局是:过去一年中自我报告的全科医生(GP)和急诊部(ED)就诊情况。使用负二项式和逻辑回归分析调查孤独感与 HCU 之间的关联,然后调整潜在的混杂因素(健康和健康行为)。孤独感与 GP 和 ED 就诊均呈正相关(GP 就诊的 IRR 范围为 1.10 至 1.49,ED 就诊的 IRR 范围为 1.16 至 1.98,报告至少一次 ED 就诊的 OR 范围为 1.13 至 1.51)。加入健康和健康行为后,孤独感与 HCU 之间的所有关联均变得不显著,除了 UCLA 评分与 GP 就诊之间存在较小的独立关联[IRR 1.03(95%CI 1.01-1.05)]。分层模型显示没有性别效应。当纳入健康和健康行为时,孤独感与 HCU 之间的所有关联除一个外均变得不显著。剩下的关联虽然很小,但仍对人群层面的卫生服务资源有影响。与最近在爱尔兰共和国的发现相反,没有出现性别影响。需要进一步研究性别、孤独感和医疗保健使用。