Age and gender differences in the association between social participation and instrumental activities of daily living among community-dwelling elderly

Abstract Background Although many studies have suggested social participation (SP) has beneficial effects on elderly people’s health, most of them failed to deal with paid work. Additionally, few studies have focused on the age effect between SP and older people’s health. To investigate whether the...

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Main Authors: Kimiko Tomioka, Norio Kurumatani, Hiroshi Hosoi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-04-01
Series:BMC Geriatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12877-017-0491-7
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spelling doaj-40bf0e212bca4a509df76091a75641972020-11-25T03:11:50ZengBMCBMC Geriatrics1471-23182017-04-0117111010.1186/s12877-017-0491-7Age and gender differences in the association between social participation and instrumental activities of daily living among community-dwelling elderlyKimiko Tomioka0Norio Kurumatani1Hiroshi Hosoi2Nara Prefectural Health Research Center, Nara Medical UniversityNara Prefectural Health Research Center, Nara Medical UniversityNara Prefectural Health Research Center, Nara Medical UniversityAbstract Background Although many studies have suggested social participation (SP) has beneficial effects on elderly people’s health, most of them failed to deal with paid work. Additionally, few studies have focused on the age effect between SP and older people’s health. To investigate whether the association between SP, including paid work, and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL), exhibits not only in gender, but also in age among community-dwelling older adults. Methods In 2014, we distributed self-administered questionnaires to all community-dwelling elderly aged ≥65 in two medium-sized cities in Nara Prefecture, Japan (n = 32,825). 22,845 residents submitted the questionnaire (response rate, 69.6%). Analyzed subjects were limited to 17,680 persons who had neither dependency in basic ADL nor missing data for required items. SP was assessed based on participation frequency in seven types of social activities: volunteer groups, sports groups, hobby groups, cultural groups, senior citizens’ clubs, neighborhood community associations, and paid work. Using Poisson regression models, prevalence ratio for poor IADL was calculated. To examine age and gender differences in the association between SP and IADL, we performed stratified analyses by age and gender group; male young-old (aged 65–74), male old-old (aged ≥75), female young-old, and female old-old. Results Prevalence of those with poor IADL was 17.1% in males and 4.5% in females, showing a significant gender difference. After adjustment for relevant covariates, volunteer groups were inversely associated with poor IADL only in males and the relationship was stronger in the old-old group than in the young-old group. Conversely, only females had a significant inverse association between paid work and poor IADL, and the association was not reliant on their ages but only those who participated infrequently had a favorable effect. Influence of age in the beneficial association between SP and IADL was generally larger in the old-old group than in the young-old group, but hobby groups were inversely associated with poor IADL, regardless of age, gender, and frequency. Conclusions Our results suggest that SP in older age is positively associated with IADL, however, the association seems to differ depending on the type of activities participated in, the participants’ gender, and their age.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12877-017-0491-7Social participationInstrumental activities of daily livingPaid workElderlyAge differencesGender differences
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kimiko Tomioka
Norio Kurumatani
Hiroshi Hosoi
spellingShingle Kimiko Tomioka
Norio Kurumatani
Hiroshi Hosoi
Age and gender differences in the association between social participation and instrumental activities of daily living among community-dwelling elderly
BMC Geriatrics
Social participation
Instrumental activities of daily living
Paid work
Elderly
Age differences
Gender differences
author_facet Kimiko Tomioka
Norio Kurumatani
Hiroshi Hosoi
author_sort Kimiko Tomioka
title Age and gender differences in the association between social participation and instrumental activities of daily living among community-dwelling elderly
title_short Age and gender differences in the association between social participation and instrumental activities of daily living among community-dwelling elderly
title_full Age and gender differences in the association between social participation and instrumental activities of daily living among community-dwelling elderly
title_fullStr Age and gender differences in the association between social participation and instrumental activities of daily living among community-dwelling elderly
title_full_unstemmed Age and gender differences in the association between social participation and instrumental activities of daily living among community-dwelling elderly
title_sort age and gender differences in the association between social participation and instrumental activities of daily living among community-dwelling elderly
publisher BMC
series BMC Geriatrics
issn 1471-2318
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Abstract Background Although many studies have suggested social participation (SP) has beneficial effects on elderly people’s health, most of them failed to deal with paid work. Additionally, few studies have focused on the age effect between SP and older people’s health. To investigate whether the association between SP, including paid work, and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL), exhibits not only in gender, but also in age among community-dwelling older adults. Methods In 2014, we distributed self-administered questionnaires to all community-dwelling elderly aged ≥65 in two medium-sized cities in Nara Prefecture, Japan (n = 32,825). 22,845 residents submitted the questionnaire (response rate, 69.6%). Analyzed subjects were limited to 17,680 persons who had neither dependency in basic ADL nor missing data for required items. SP was assessed based on participation frequency in seven types of social activities: volunteer groups, sports groups, hobby groups, cultural groups, senior citizens’ clubs, neighborhood community associations, and paid work. Using Poisson regression models, prevalence ratio for poor IADL was calculated. To examine age and gender differences in the association between SP and IADL, we performed stratified analyses by age and gender group; male young-old (aged 65–74), male old-old (aged ≥75), female young-old, and female old-old. Results Prevalence of those with poor IADL was 17.1% in males and 4.5% in females, showing a significant gender difference. After adjustment for relevant covariates, volunteer groups were inversely associated with poor IADL only in males and the relationship was stronger in the old-old group than in the young-old group. Conversely, only females had a significant inverse association between paid work and poor IADL, and the association was not reliant on their ages but only those who participated infrequently had a favorable effect. Influence of age in the beneficial association between SP and IADL was generally larger in the old-old group than in the young-old group, but hobby groups were inversely associated with poor IADL, regardless of age, gender, and frequency. Conclusions Our results suggest that SP in older age is positively associated with IADL, however, the association seems to differ depending on the type of activities participated in, the participants’ gender, and their age.
topic Social participation
Instrumental activities of daily living
Paid work
Elderly
Age differences
Gender differences
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12877-017-0491-7
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