Centre for Evaluation and Analysis of Public Policies, Faculty of Philosophy, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland.
Department of Quantitative Methods & Information Technology, Kozminski University, Warsaw, Poland.
Eur J Public Health. 2024 Jun 7;34(3):473-481. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/ckae014.
There is substantial evidence on the importance of voluntary activities for the health of middle-aged and older adults. Evidence on the effects of health and well-being on volunteering is more limited. This study examines reciprocal longitudinal associations between voluntary and/or charity activities and 21 indicators related to physical health, well-being, cognitive impairment and daily life functioning among middle-aged and older adults.
Longitudinal data were collected between 2011 and 2020 from a sample of 19 821 middle-aged and older adults from 15 countries participating in the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe. An outcome-wide analysis and an exposure-wide analysis were applied and generalized estimating equations were used. Robustness analyses were conducted.
Voluntary and/or charity activities almost every week or more often were prospectively associated with greater emotional well-being, reduced risks of limitations in activities of daily living and of being diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease at a 6-year follow-up. Positive reverse associations were found from emotional well-being to volunteering. Limitations in daily life activities, increased loneliness, high blood cholesterol, hypertension and chronic lung disease were found to impede participation in voluntary and/or charity activities over time. Feedback loops between voluntary and/or charity activities and well-being and limitations in daily activities may exist.
Understanding the reciprocal nature of the relationship between volunteering and health and well-being can help identify strategies to encourage volunteering among middle-aged and older adults with specific health conditions and to target health promotion efforts towards volunteers.
有大量证据表明,志愿活动对中年和老年人的健康很重要。关于健康和幸福感对志愿服务的影响的证据则更为有限。本研究考察了中年和老年人的志愿和/或慈善活动与 21 个与身体健康、幸福感、认知障碍和日常生活功能相关的指标之间的互惠纵向关联。
这项纵向研究的数据是在 2011 年至 2020 年间从来自 15 个国家的 19821 名中年和老年人样本中收集的,这些人参加了欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查。本研究采用了全结局分析和全暴露分析,并使用了广义估计方程。还进行了稳健性分析。
几乎每周或更频繁地参与志愿和/或慈善活动与更好的情绪健康、更低的日常生活活动受限风险以及 6 年后被诊断为老年痴呆症的风险相关。从情绪健康到志愿服务则存在正向的反向关联。日常生活活动受限、孤独感增加、高胆固醇、高血压和慢性肺病会随着时间的推移阻碍人们参与志愿和/或慈善活动。志愿和/或慈善活动与幸福感和日常生活活动受限之间可能存在反馈循环。
了解志愿服务与健康和幸福感之间的这种互惠关系的性质可以帮助确定鼓励中年和老年人在有特定健康状况的情况下参与志愿服务的策略,并针对志愿者开展健康促进工作。