Socio-demographic variations in moves to institutional care 1991-2001: a record linkage study from England and Wales
- PMID: 17548425
- DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afm067
Socio-demographic variations in moves to institutional care 1991-2001: a record linkage study from England and Wales
Abstract
Background: Only a minority of older people in England and Wales live in institutional care, but among the older of the old, this minority is large. Disability is the major driver of admissions, but socio-demographic factors are also relevant. Understanding more about the influence of these is important for planning by long-term care.
Objective: To investigate effects of socio-demographic factors, including housing tenure, household type, marital status, and number of children, on the proportions of elderly people who made a transition from living in the community in 1991 to living in institutional care in 2001.
Subjects and setting: Nationally representative record linkage study including 36,650 people aged 65 years and over, living in the community in England and Wales in 1991, who were still alive in 2001. Nineteen thousand women aged 75-89 years in 2001 were included in additional analyses of effects of parity (number of children borne).
Methods: Bi-variate and multivariate analyses of variations in sample proportions, who by 2001 were resident in institutional care.
Results: 4.3% of men and 9.3% of women in the surviving sample then aged 75 years and over, were in institutional care in 2001. Older age, living in rented accommodation, living alone in 1991 and being unmarried in 2001, as well as long-term illness, were associated with higher proportions making this transition. Women had higher risks than men. Childless women aged 64-79 years in 1991 had a 25% higher risk than women with children of being in institutional care in 2001.
Conclusion: Socio-demographic factors continue to influence risks of entry to institutional care in England and Wales.
Comment in
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Tracking demographic footprints.Age Ageing. 2007 Jul;36(4):360-1. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afm072. Age Ageing. 2007. PMID: 17636268 No abstract available.
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