Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, P.O. Box 1738, 3000 DR, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
BMC Geriatr. 2022 Aug 22;22(1):694. doi: 10.1186/s12877-022-03353-4.
Self-management abilities seem to be important for the cognitive functioning of older people, especially those who are frail. We investigated relationships between broad self-management abilities (initiative taking, investment behavior, resource variety, resource multifunctionality, self-efficacy, and positive frame of mind) and cognitive functioning among frail older people while controlling for background characteristics (sex, age, marital status, and educational level).
Survey data were collected from mid-2014 to mid-2015 from community-dwelling frail older people residing in North Brabant, the Netherlands. We measured cognitive functioning with the 12-item Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE-12) and self-management abilities with the short version of the Self-Management Ability Scale (SMAS-S).
In total, 588 of 834 potential participants were willing to participate (70.5% response rate). The mean age was 82.33 ± 5.19 and the majority (68.5%) of respondents were female. About one-third (38.4%) of respondents had low educational levels and 61.7% lived alone. Mean MMSE-12 and SMAS-S scores were 9.68 ± 2.10 and 3.70 ± 0.88, respectively. Bivariate analyses showed that all six self-management abilities were related positively to cognitive functioning. Multivariate analyses with adjustment for background characteristics (sex, age, marital status, and educational level) showed that cognitive functioning was associated positively with initiative taking (β = 0.23, p = 0.030) and investment behavior (β = 0.24, p = 0.030) among community-dwelling frail older people.
This study clearly showed that a repertoire of broad self-management abilities is related to cognitive functioning among community-dwelling frail older people. Initiative taking and investment behavior seem to be especially important. These findings are of interest in a time of populational aging and an increasing number of older people dealing with cognitive problems. Preventive investments in (older) people's self-management abilities are expected to be beneficial for their cognitive functioning in the long term.
自我管理能力似乎对老年人的认知功能很重要,尤其是那些体弱的老年人。我们调查了广泛的自我管理能力(主动性、投资行为、资源多样性、资源多功能性、自我效能感和积极的心态)与认知功能之间的关系,同时控制了背景特征(性别、年龄、婚姻状况和教育水平)。
2014 年中期至 2015 年中期,从居住在荷兰北布拉班特省的社区体弱老年人中收集了调查数据。我们使用 12 项简短心智状态测试(MMSE-12)来测量认知功能,使用自我管理能力简短量表(SMAS-S)来测量自我管理能力。
在 834 名潜在参与者中,共有 588 名愿意参与(响应率为 70.5%)。平均年龄为 82.33±5.19,大多数(68.5%)受访者为女性。约三分之一(38.4%)的受访者受教育程度较低,61.7%独居。平均 MMSE-12 和 SMAS-S 得分为 9.68±2.10 和 3.70±0.88。单变量分析表明,所有六种自我管理能力与认知功能均呈正相关。多元分析调整了背景特征(性别、年龄、婚姻状况和教育水平)后,认知功能与主动性(β=0.23,p=0.030)和投资行为(β=0.24,p=0.030)呈正相关。
本研究清楚地表明,广泛的自我管理能力组合与社区中体弱老年人的认知功能有关。主动性和投资行为似乎尤为重要。在人口老龄化和越来越多的老年人面临认知问题的时代,这些发现具有重要意义。对(老年人)的自我管理能力进行预防性投资有望从长远来看有益于他们的认知功能。