School of Social Work, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1010 W. Nevada, Urbana, IL, 61801, USA.
Department of Health Studies, University of Rhode Island Independence Square, 25 West Independence Way, Kingston, RI, 02881, USA.
BMC Geriatr. 2022 Feb 5;22(1):105. doi: 10.1186/s12877-022-02800-6.
Brazil is among the countries hit hardest by COVID-19, and older adults are among the vulnerable groups. Intergenerational coresidence and interdependence among family members, both prevalent in Brazil, likely increase social and physical contact and thus potential infection.
Using nationally representative data from the COVID-19 module of the Brazilian National Household Sample Survey (Pesquisa Nacional por Amostra de Domicílios), collected between July and November of 2020, we examined the association between living arrangements and exposure to and testing for COVID-19 among 63,816 Brazilians aged 60 years and older. We examine whether living arrangements influence self-reported COVID-19 symptoms as an indicator of subjective health assessment, testing as an indicator of health care service use, and a positive COVID-19 test result as an objective indicator of exposure to the disease.
Living arrangements shape older adults' vulnerabilities to COVID-19 exposure and testing. Specifically, those living alone were more likely to report having symptoms and having had a test for COVID-19. However, older adults in multigenerational and skipped generation households were more likely than solo-dwellers to test positive for COVID-19. Those with symptoms were more likely to test, regardless of their living arrangement. Among older adults without symptoms, those living alone had a higher probability of testing than those living in multigenerational or skipped-generation households.
Overall, our findings suggest that coresidence with younger family members puts older adults' health at risk in the context of COVID-19. As younger Brazilians are increasingly vulnerable to COVID-19 and experiencing severe outcomes, policy makers need to be more attentive to the health needs of households that comprise older and younger cohorts, which are also more prevalent in poor and marginalized segments of the population.
巴西是受 COVID-19 影响最严重的国家之一,老年人属于弱势群体。代际同住和家庭成员之间的相互依存关系在巴西很普遍,这可能会增加社会和身体接触,从而增加潜在的感染风险。
我们利用 2020 年 7 月至 11 月期间巴西全国住户抽样调查(巴西国家住户样本调查 COVID-19 模块)中具有全国代表性的数据,研究了居住安排与 63816 名 60 岁及以上巴西人接触和检测 COVID-19 之间的关联。我们研究了居住安排是否会影响自我报告的 COVID-19 症状(作为主观健康评估的指标)、检测(作为卫生保健服务使用的指标)以及 COVID-19 检测阳性结果(作为接触疾病的客观指标)。
居住安排塑造了老年人对 COVID-19 暴露和检测的脆弱性。具体而言,独居者更有可能报告出现症状和接受 COVID-19 检测。然而,与独居者相比,多代同堂和隔代家庭中的老年人更有可能 COVID-19 检测呈阳性。有症状者更有可能接受检测,无论其居住安排如何。在无症状的老年人中,独居者比多代同堂或隔代家庭中的老年人更有可能接受检测。
总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,与年轻家庭成员同住会使老年人在 COVID-19 大流行期间的健康面临风险。随着越来越多的年轻巴西人感染 COVID-19 并出现严重后果,政策制定者需要更加关注由年龄较大和较年轻人群组成的家庭的健康需求,这些家庭在贫穷和边缘化人群中更为普遍。