Onset of mobility limitations in old age: the combined effect of socioeconomic position and social relations

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Onset of mobility limitations in old age: the combined effect of socioeconomic position and social relations. / Nilsson, Charlotte Juul; Avlund, Kirsten; Lund, Rikke.

In: Age and Ageing, Vol. 40, 07.07.2011, p. 607-614.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nilsson, CJ, Avlund, K & Lund, R 2011, 'Onset of mobility limitations in old age: the combined effect of socioeconomic position and social relations', Age and Ageing, vol. 40, pp. 607-614. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afr073

APA

Nilsson, C. J., Avlund, K., & Lund, R. (2011). Onset of mobility limitations in old age: the combined effect of socioeconomic position and social relations. Age and Ageing, 40, 607-614. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afr073

Vancouver

Nilsson CJ, Avlund K, Lund R. Onset of mobility limitations in old age: the combined effect of socioeconomic position and social relations. Age and Ageing. 2011 Jul 7;40:607-614. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afr073

Author

Nilsson, Charlotte Juul ; Avlund, Kirsten ; Lund, Rikke. / Onset of mobility limitations in old age: the combined effect of socioeconomic position and social relations. In: Age and Ageing. 2011 ; Vol. 40. pp. 607-614.

Bibtex

@article{8f8158dfb3b041998cd330fc3e4fb367,
title = "Onset of mobility limitations in old age: the combined effect of socioeconomic position and social relations",
abstract = "Purpose: to examine the combined effect of cohabitation status and social participation, respectively, and socioeconomic position on onset of mobility limitations in a prospective study among older Danes. Design and methods: logistic regression analyses with combined exposure variables were performed in a study population of 2,839 older men and women from the Danish Intervention Study on Preventive Home Visits. Results: among men low financial assets, living alone or having low social participation significantly increased the odds ratios (OR) for onset of mobility limitations. Among women only low financial assets and low social participation significantly increased the ORs for onset of mobility limitations. Analyses with combined exposure variables showed that simultaneous exposure to low financial assets and poor social relations significantly increased the ORs for onset of mobility limitations among both genders, yet the tendencies appeared stronger for males. In particular, men with simultaneous exposure to low financial assets and low social participation had increased odds ratios for onset of mobility limitations, OR = 5.36 (2.51-11.47), compared with the non-exposed. Conclusion: the study suggests that future interventions to increase social participation might alleviate the negative effects on mobility experienced by older people in low socioeconomic position, perhaps especially among older males.",
author = "Nilsson, {Charlotte Juul} and Kirsten Avlund and Rikke Lund",
year = "2011",
month = jul,
day = "7",
doi = "10.1093/ageing/afr073",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "607--614",
journal = "Age and Ageing",
issn = "0002-0729",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Onset of mobility limitations in old age: the combined effect of socioeconomic position and social relations

AU - Nilsson, Charlotte Juul

AU - Avlund, Kirsten

AU - Lund, Rikke

PY - 2011/7/7

Y1 - 2011/7/7

N2 - Purpose: to examine the combined effect of cohabitation status and social participation, respectively, and socioeconomic position on onset of mobility limitations in a prospective study among older Danes. Design and methods: logistic regression analyses with combined exposure variables were performed in a study population of 2,839 older men and women from the Danish Intervention Study on Preventive Home Visits. Results: among men low financial assets, living alone or having low social participation significantly increased the odds ratios (OR) for onset of mobility limitations. Among women only low financial assets and low social participation significantly increased the ORs for onset of mobility limitations. Analyses with combined exposure variables showed that simultaneous exposure to low financial assets and poor social relations significantly increased the ORs for onset of mobility limitations among both genders, yet the tendencies appeared stronger for males. In particular, men with simultaneous exposure to low financial assets and low social participation had increased odds ratios for onset of mobility limitations, OR = 5.36 (2.51-11.47), compared with the non-exposed. Conclusion: the study suggests that future interventions to increase social participation might alleviate the negative effects on mobility experienced by older people in low socioeconomic position, perhaps especially among older males.

AB - Purpose: to examine the combined effect of cohabitation status and social participation, respectively, and socioeconomic position on onset of mobility limitations in a prospective study among older Danes. Design and methods: logistic regression analyses with combined exposure variables were performed in a study population of 2,839 older men and women from the Danish Intervention Study on Preventive Home Visits. Results: among men low financial assets, living alone or having low social participation significantly increased the odds ratios (OR) for onset of mobility limitations. Among women only low financial assets and low social participation significantly increased the ORs for onset of mobility limitations. Analyses with combined exposure variables showed that simultaneous exposure to low financial assets and poor social relations significantly increased the ORs for onset of mobility limitations among both genders, yet the tendencies appeared stronger for males. In particular, men with simultaneous exposure to low financial assets and low social participation had increased odds ratios for onset of mobility limitations, OR = 5.36 (2.51-11.47), compared with the non-exposed. Conclusion: the study suggests that future interventions to increase social participation might alleviate the negative effects on mobility experienced by older people in low socioeconomic position, perhaps especially among older males.

U2 - 10.1093/ageing/afr073

DO - 10.1093/ageing/afr073

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 21737461

VL - 40

SP - 607

EP - 614

JO - Age and Ageing

JF - Age and Ageing

SN - 0002-0729

ER -

ID: 33868656