6533b836fe1ef96bd12a091a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Associations of socio-economic position and disability among older women in Britain and Jyväskylä, Finland

Eino HeikkinenShah EbrahimJoy AdamsonNina Rautio

subject

AgingHealth (social science)Logistic regressionSocial classCohort StudiesInterviews as TopicDisability EvaluationPostal questionnaireSurveys and QuestionnairesHealth Status IndicatorsHumansDisabled PersonsProspective StudiesOccupationsClimbing stairsFinlandAgedAged 80 and overSocio economic positionAge FactorsUnited KingdomSocial ClassMulticenter studyEducational StatusWomen's HealthFemaleGeriatrics and GerontologyPsychologyGerontologyCohort studyDemography

description

The aim was to compare the pattern of associations in measures of socio-economic position and disability among British and Finnish older women. In Britain data from the British Women's Heart and Health Study was used. Women from 23 towns took part in a nurse-assessed medical examination and postal questionnaire (n = 4286). In Finland, data from the Evergreen study was used. Eight hundred and four women from the city of Jyväskylä were interviewed at home. Socio-economic position was measured according to social class in childhood, education, use of a car, home ownership and previous occupation. Disability measures included questions on difficulties in washing/dressing and climbing stairs. Logistic regression analyses were conducted to examine the relationship between disability and socio-economic position. In the age-adjusted analysis of both samples increasing disability in washing/dressing and climbing stairs was associated with at least one of the measures of deprivation. The relationship between socio-economic position and disability was more distinct in the British than Finnish women. Despite adjustment for a range of confounders, the relationship between socio-economic position and disability was not much attenuated, particularly in the British women. The associations in the measures of socio-economic position and disability showed a slightly different pattern between the British and Finnish women.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.archger.2005.06.005