Rachele Jerome N, Loh Venurs, Timperio Anna, Veitch Jenny, Thomas Rees, Reid Rebecca A, Brown Wendy J
College of Sport, Health, and Engineering, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia.
Institute for Health and Sport, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Jul 3;25(1):2378. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-23309-8.
Australia's population is ageing, with a projected continued increase in the proportion of individuals aged 65 years and older. Good physical function is important to ensure independence and mobility among older adults. This study examined changes in physical function by socioeconomic indicators including education, occupation, household income and neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage.
Data were from waves four (2013) and five (2016) (1,186 men and 1,673 women) of the HABITAT study, a multilevel longitudinal study of adults aged 40-65 at baseline (2007) living in 200 neighbourhoods in Brisbane, Australia. Individual-level socioeconomic indicators were self-reported and physical function was self-reported using the 10-item subscale of the Short-Form 36 survey, with scores ranging from 0 to 100. Neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage was obtained from a census-based Index of Relative Socioeconomic Disadvantage score. Data were analysed using multilevel linear regression.
Pooled analysis showed graded inequalities in physical function across all socioeconomic groups: those with lower levels of education, occupation and household income all had lower function, while residents of the most disadvantaged neighbourhoods had 8.16 lower function (95%CI: 10.21, 6.12) than those in the most advantaged neighbourhoods. Over the three-year period, there was a mean reduction in physical function scores of 1.97 (95%CI: -2.58, -1.36), though physical function inequalities did not widen over time between socioeconomic groups.
There was little evidence of inequalities in the magnitude of decline in physical function across socioeconomic groups between the two time points. Future research should consider more objective performance-based measures to better understand the complexity of physical function among the ageing population.
澳大利亚人口正在老龄化,预计65岁及以上人群的比例将持续上升。良好的身体功能对于确保老年人的独立性和行动能力至关重要。本研究通过教育、职业、家庭收入和邻里社会经济劣势等社会经济指标,考察了身体功能的变化。
数据来自HABITAT研究的第四轮(2013年)和第五轮(2016年)(1186名男性和1673名女性),这是一项针对2007年基线时年龄在40 - 65岁、居住在澳大利亚布里斯班200个社区的成年人的多层次纵向研究。个体层面的社会经济指标通过自我报告获得,身体功能通过简短健康调查问卷36项中的10项子量表进行自我报告,得分范围为0至100。邻里社会经济劣势通过基于人口普查的相对社会经济劣势指数得分获得。数据采用多层次线性回归进行分析。
汇总分析显示,所有社会经济群体在身体功能方面存在分级不平等:教育程度较低、职业地位较低和家庭收入较低的人群身体功能均较低,而最弱势社区的居民比最优势社区的居民身体功能低8.16(95%置信区间:10.21,6.12)。在三年期间,身体功能得分平均下降了1.97(95%置信区间:-2.58,-