| Literature DB >> 21792391 |
G Kevin Randall1, Peter Martin, Maurice Macdonald, Jennifer Margrett, Alex J Bishop, Leonard W Poon.
Abstract
We investigated the influence of social relations on health outcomes in very late life by examining the support-efficacy convoy model among older adults who resided in three different residential environments (centenarians in private homes, n = 126; centenarians in assisted living facilities, n = 55; centenarians in nursing homes, n = 105). For each group, path analytic models were employed to test our hypotheses; analyses controlled for sex, mental status, education, perceived economic sufficiency, and activities of daily living. The hypothesized relationships among the models' variables were unique to each of the three groups; three different models fit the data depending upon residential environment. The direct and indirect effects of social relations assessments were positive for the mental and physical health of very old adults, suggesting that participants welcomed the support. However, residential status moderated the associations between the assessments of social relations, self-efficacy, and both outcomes, physical and mental health.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21792391 PMCID: PMC3139897 DOI: 10.4061/2011/280727
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Aging Res ISSN: 2090-2204
Figure 1The study's conceptual model was based on the theoretical work of Antonucci et al. [13].
Descriptives and ANOVA results for study variables.
| Variables | Private homes | Assisted living facilities | Nursing homes | One-way ANOVA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M (SD) | M (SD) | M (SD) | ||
| (1) Age | 99.76 (1.71) | 100 (2.00) | 101 (2.10) | |
| (2) Sex | 76.2% female | 86% female | 87.6% female | |
| (3) Mental status (MMSE) | 20.43 (7.09) | 19.44 (7.87) | 11.37 (8.24) | ∗∗∗ |
| (4) Years of education | 11.65 (3.87) | 13 (3.05) | 11.15 (3.59) | |
| (5) Economic sufficiency | 2.56 (.63) | 2.67 (.48) | 2.73 (.47) | |
| (6) ADLs | 37.11 (7.43) | 37.42 (7.03) | 33.98 (8.88) | ∗∗ |
| (7) Physical health | 1.87 (.76) | 1.85 (.62) | 1.82 (.91) | |
| (8) Mental heath | 2.02 (.62) | 1.94 (.57) | 1.73 (.76) | ∗ |
| (9) Self-efficacy | 5.66 (2.09) | 5.64 (2.63) | 5.50 (1.98) | |
| (10) Social resources | 1.81 (.78) | 1.83 (.75) | 1.96 (.84) | |
| (11) Social provisions | 35.19 (2.15) | 35.24 (2.55) | 34.39 (2.73) |
* Private homes differed from nursing homes, P < .05;
** Private homes and assisted living facilities differed from nursing homes, P < .05;
*** Each was significantly different from the other, P < .05.
Figure 2Test results for the support-efficacy model with centenarians residing in private homes; model fit: Satorra-Bentler χ2 (N = 126; df = 3) =5.14; P = .16; CFI = .97; RMSEA = .08; SRMR = .03(using F1ML). Nonsignificant paths deleted; parameter estimates are from the standardized solution. Test of Indirect Effect for Social Resources on Physical Health (.07; t = 1.93; P = .053; two-tailed). Test of Indirect Effect for Social Provisions on Physical Health (.09; t = 1.66; P = .097; two-tailed). Endogenous variables were controlled for sex, mental status, ADLs, education, and economic sufficiency.
Figure 3Test results for the support-efficacy model with centenarians residing in assisted living facilities; model fit: Satorra-Bentler χ2 (N = 55; df = 4) =5.29; P = .26; CFI = .97; RMSEA = .08; SRMR = .04(using F1ML). Parameter estimates are from the standardized solution; endogenous variables were controlled for sex, mental status, ADLs, education, and economic sufficiency.
Figure 4Test results for the support-efficacy model with centenarians residing in nursing homes; model fit: Satorra-Bentler χ2 (N = 105; df = 5) = 6.33; P = .28; CFI = .94; RMSEA = .05; SRMR = .06 (using FIML). Parameter estimates are from the standardized solution; endogenous variables were controlled for mental status and education.