Estimating the effect of health assessments on mortality, physical functioning and health care utilisation for women aged 75 years and older

Health assessments have potential to improve health of older people. This study compares long-term health care utilisation, physical functioning, and mortality for women aged 75 years or over who have had a health assessment and those who have not. Prospective data on health service use, physical fu...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2021-04, Vol.16 (4), p.e0249207-e0249207
Hauptverfasser: Dolja-Gore, Xenia, Byles, Julie E, Tavener, Meredith A, Chojenta, Catherine L, Majeed, Tazeen, Nair, Balakrishnan R, Mishra, Gita D
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container_title PloS one
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creator Dolja-Gore, Xenia
Byles, Julie E
Tavener, Meredith A
Chojenta, Catherine L
Majeed, Tazeen
Nair, Balakrishnan R
Mishra, Gita D
description Health assessments have potential to improve health of older people. This study compares long-term health care utilisation, physical functioning, and mortality for women aged 75 years or over who have had a health assessment and those who have not. Prospective data on health service use, physical functioning, and deaths among a large cohort of women born 1921-26 were analysed. Propensity score matching was used to produce comparable groups of women according to whether they had a health assessment or not. The study population included 6128 (67.3%) women who had an assessment, and 2971 (32.7%) women who had no assessment. Propensity matching produced 2101 pairs. Women who had an assessment had more use of other health services, longer survival, and were more likely to survive with high physical functioning compared to women with no assessment. Among women who had good baseline physcial functioning scores, women who had an assessment had significantly lower odds of poor outcomes at 1000 days follow-up compared to women who had no assessment (OR: 0.67, 95%CI: 0.52, 0.85). This large observational study shows the real-world potential for assessments to improve health outcomes for older women. However, they also increased health service use. This increased healthcare is likely to be an important mechanism in improving the women's health outcomes.
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subjects Activities of daily living
Adequacy
Assessments
Biology and Life Sciences
Blood pressure
Body mass
Body mass index
Body size
Cognition
Demographic aspects
Editing
Geriatrics
Health aspects
Health care policy
Health insurance
Health problems
Health risk assessment
Health risks
Health services utilization
Immunization
Influenza
Medical care
Medicine
Medicine and Health Sciences
Mental health
Mood
Mortality
Nutrition
Older people
Patients
People and Places
Public health
Pulse rate
Quality of life
Research and Analysis Methods
Systematic review
Tetanus
Utilization
Women
title Estimating the effect of health assessments on mortality, physical functioning and health care utilisation for women aged 75 years and older
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