Changes in person-environmental fit and ADL dependence among older Swedish adults. A 10-year follow-up.
(2008) In Aging clinical and experimental research 20(5). p.469-478- Abstract
- BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In order to investigate the relation between personal functional capacity and the physical housing environment during the aging process, the aim of this study was to give a long-term description of person-environmental fit (P-E fit) problems in terms of housing accessibility and ADL dependence among older adults, and to study their relationships at three points in time. METHODS: A 10- year longitudinal design was used: baseline (1994), follow- up 1 (2000) and follow-up 2 (2004). Using the Swedish national population register, a baseline sample of persons aged 75-84 years was identified. Of the 133 participants at baseline, the 31 participants still available at follow-up 2 were included in this study. Data on housing... (More)
- BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In order to investigate the relation between personal functional capacity and the physical housing environment during the aging process, the aim of this study was to give a long-term description of person-environmental fit (P-E fit) problems in terms of housing accessibility and ADL dependence among older adults, and to study their relationships at three points in time. METHODS: A 10- year longitudinal design was used: baseline (1994), follow- up 1 (2000) and follow-up 2 (2004). Using the Swedish national population register, a baseline sample of persons aged 75-84 years was identified. Of the 133 participants at baseline, the 31 participants still available at follow-up 2 were included in this study. Data on housing accessibility, functional limitations and dependence in ADL were collected by means of interviews and observations at home visits. RESULTS: P-E fit problems increased significantly between baseline and follow-up 1 and between follow-ups 1 and 2. No significant changes in overall ADL dependence were recorded. The total number of functional limitations, dependence on walking aids and P-E fit were significantly correlated to ADL dependence, at both follow-up 1 and follow-up 2, but not at baseline. CONCLUSIONS: Results confirm that functional decline is a major driver toward increased ADL dependence during the aging process, whereas environmental barriers per se are not related to such disability. Instead, P-E fit is significantly related to ADL dependence, and the relationship grows stronger with advancing age. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1270991
- author
- Werngren-Elgström, Monica LU ; Carlsson, Gunilla LU and Iwarsson, Susanne LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2008
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Aging clinical and experimental research
- volume
- 20
- issue
- 5
- pages
- 469 - 478
- publisher
- Kurtis
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000261510300013
- pmid:19039290
- scopus:57749120291
- ISSN
- 1720-8319
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- be1765e7-07d4-48d4-988d-bfc3bda42db7 (old id 1270991)
- alternative location
- http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19039290
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 09:06:46
- date last changed
- 2022-01-29 08:17:29
@article{be1765e7-07d4-48d4-988d-bfc3bda42db7, abstract = {{BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In order to investigate the relation between personal functional capacity and the physical housing environment during the aging process, the aim of this study was to give a long-term description of person-environmental fit (P-E fit) problems in terms of housing accessibility and ADL dependence among older adults, and to study their relationships at three points in time. METHODS: A 10- year longitudinal design was used: baseline (1994), follow- up 1 (2000) and follow-up 2 (2004). Using the Swedish national population register, a baseline sample of persons aged 75-84 years was identified. Of the 133 participants at baseline, the 31 participants still available at follow-up 2 were included in this study. Data on housing accessibility, functional limitations and dependence in ADL were collected by means of interviews and observations at home visits. RESULTS: P-E fit problems increased significantly between baseline and follow-up 1 and between follow-ups 1 and 2. No significant changes in overall ADL dependence were recorded. The total number of functional limitations, dependence on walking aids and P-E fit were significantly correlated to ADL dependence, at both follow-up 1 and follow-up 2, but not at baseline. CONCLUSIONS: Results confirm that functional decline is a major driver toward increased ADL dependence during the aging process, whereas environmental barriers per se are not related to such disability. Instead, P-E fit is significantly related to ADL dependence, and the relationship grows stronger with advancing age.}}, author = {{Werngren-Elgström, Monica and Carlsson, Gunilla and Iwarsson, Susanne}}, issn = {{1720-8319}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{5}}, pages = {{469--478}}, publisher = {{Kurtis}}, series = {{Aging clinical and experimental research}}, title = {{Changes in person-environmental fit and ADL dependence among older Swedish adults. A 10-year follow-up.}}, url = {{http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19039290}}, volume = {{20}}, year = {{2008}}, }