Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2022 Jul 5;77(7):e160-e166. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbab166.
To understand changes during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in weekly contact with nonresident family and friends for U.S. adults aged 70 and older in residential care and community settings.
Participants in the National Health and Aging Trends Study COVID-19 mail supplement (N = 3,098) reported frequency of phone, electronic, video, and in-person contact with nonresident family and friends in a typical week before and during the pandemic. We examined less than weekly contact by mode for those in residential care settings and community residents with and without limitations. We estimated multinomial logit models to examine predictors of change to less than weekly contact (vs. maintaining weekly or more contact) by mode, overall, and stratified by setting.
Weekly in-person contact fell substantially (from 61% to 39%) and more so in residential care (from 56% to 22%), where nearly 4 in 10 transitioned to less than weekly in-person contact (doubling to 8 out of 10). Weekly or more contact was largely stable for electronic and telephone modes across settings. Weekly or more video contact increased mainly for community residents without limitations. Compared to community residents without limitations, those in assisted living or nursing homes had more than 5 times the odds (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 5.3; p = .01) of changing to less than weekly in-person contact; those in independent living also had higher odds of changing to less than weekly in-person (AOR = 2.6; p = .01) and video (AOR = 3.4; p = .01) contact.
The pandemic revealed the importance of ensuring that communication technologies to maintain social ties are available to and usable by older adults, particularly for those living in residential care settings.
了解美国 70 岁及以上居住在护理和社区环境中的成年人与非居住在家庭和朋友的每周联系在 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行期间的变化。
参与国家健康与老龄化趋势研究 COVID-19 邮件补充调查(N=3098)的参与者报告了在大流行之前和期间,他们在典型一周内与非居住在家庭和朋友进行电话、电子、视频和面对面联系的频率。我们通过模式检查了居住在护理环境中的人和没有限制的社区居民中每周不到一次的联系。我们估计了多项逻辑回归模型,以检查通过模式(总体而言)以及按环境分层的方式,每周接触频率下降(与保持每周或更多接触相比)的变化的预测因素。
每周面对面接触大幅下降(从 61%降至 39%),在护理环境中下降更为明显(从 56%降至 22%),近 4 人中有 1 人转变为每周不到一次的面对面接触(增加了一倍,每 10 人中有 8 人)。在整个环境中,电子和电话模式的每周或更多电子接触基本保持稳定。每周或更多视频接触主要增加了没有限制的社区居民。与没有限制的社区居民相比,生活在辅助生活或疗养院的人改变为每周不到一次的面对面接触的可能性是其 5 倍以上(调整后的优势比[OR]为 5.3;p=0.01);生活在独立生活中的人改变为每周不到一次的面对面(OR=2.6;p=0.01)和视频(OR=3.4;p=0.01)接触的可能性也更高。
大流行揭示了确保老年人可用和可使用保持社交联系的通信技术的重要性,特别是对于居住在护理环境中的老年人。