School of Nursing, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street W., Hamilton, ON, L8S 4K1, Canada.
School of Public Health Sciences, University of Waterloo & Schlegel-University of Waterloo, Research Institute for Aging, 200 University Ave W., Waterloo, ON, N2L 3G1, Canada.
BMC Geriatr. 2023 Jan 6;23(1):8. doi: 10.1186/s12877-023-03726-3.
While older adults are living longer, they often face health challenges, including living with multiple chronic conditions. How older adults respond and adapt to the challenges of multimorbidity to maintain health and wellness is of increasing research interest. Self-reported health, emerging as an important measure of health status, has broad clinical and research applications, and has been described as a predictor of future morbidity and mortality. However, there is limited understanding of how individual, social, and environmental factors, including those related to multimorbidity resilience, influence self-reported health among community-dwelling older adults (≥ 65 years).
Informed by the Lifecourse Model of Multimorbidity Resilience, this explanatory case study research explored older adults' perceptions of how these factors influence self-reported health. Data were generated through semi-structured telephone interviews with community-dwelling older adults.
Fifteen older adults participated in this study. Four key themes, specific to how these older adults describe individual, social, environmental, and multimorbidity resilience factors as shaping their self-reported health, were identified: 1) health is a responsibility - "What I have to do"; 2) health is doing what you want to do despite health-related limitations - "I do what I want to do"; 3) the application and activation of personal strengths - "The way you think", and; 4) through comparison and learning from others - "Looking around at other people". These themes, while distinct, were found to be highly interconnected with recurring concepts such as independence, control, and psychological health and well-being, demonstrating the nuance and complexity of self-reported health.
Findings from this study advance understanding of the factors that influence assessments of health among community-dwelling older adults. Self-reported health remains a highly predictive measure of future morbidity and mortality in this population, however, there is a need for future research to contribute additional understanding in order to shape policy and practice.
随着老年人寿命的延长,他们经常面临健康挑战,包括患有多种慢性疾病。老年人如何应对和适应多种疾病的挑战,以保持健康和幸福,这是越来越受到关注的研究课题。自我报告的健康状况作为健康状况的一个重要衡量标准,具有广泛的临床和研究应用,并被描述为未来发病率和死亡率的预测指标。然而,对于个体、社会和环境因素,包括与多种疾病弹性相关的因素,如何影响社区居住的老年人(≥65 岁)的自我报告健康状况,我们的理解还很有限。
本解释性病例研究以多种疾病弹性的生命历程模型为指导,探讨了老年人对这些因素如何影响自我报告健康的看法。数据是通过对社区居住的老年人进行半结构化电话访谈收集的。
本研究共有 15 名老年人参与。确定了四个关键主题,这些主题具体说明了这些老年人如何描述个人、社会、环境和多种疾病弹性因素,这些因素塑造了他们的自我报告健康状况:1)健康是一种责任-“我必须做什么”;2)健康是在有健康相关限制的情况下做你想做的事情-“我做我想做的事情”;3)个人优势的应用和激活-“你的思维方式”;4)通过与他人比较和学习-“观察周围的人”。这些主题虽然不同,但彼此高度关联,反复出现的概念包括独立性、控制感和心理健康和幸福感,这表明自我报告健康状况的细微差别和复杂性。
本研究的结果提高了我们对影响社区居住的老年人健康评估的因素的理解。自我报告的健康状况仍然是这一人群未来发病率和死亡率的高度预测指标,但需要进一步研究以增加对这一问题的理解,从而为政策和实践提供依据。