| Literature DB >> 27465680 |
Maria H Nilsson1,2, Susann Ullén3, Henrik Ekström4, Susanne Iwarsson4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are knowledge gaps about the life situation for people ageing with Parkinson's disease (PD), with virtually no understanding of home and health dynamics. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to explore the association between aspects of health and objective as well as perceived housing in people with PD.Entities:
Keywords: Activities of daily living; Canonical correlations; External control; Health; Housing; Parkinson’s disease
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27465680 PMCID: PMC4963956 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-016-0319-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Participant characteristics, n = 231
| Variable | Median, q1-q3 (unless otherwise stated) |
|---|---|
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 70 (9.1) |
| Sex (men), | 144 (62) |
| Living alone (yes), | 58 (25) |
| Years lived in the present home | 17, 5-33 |
| Type of housing (apartment/private house)a, | 101 (44)/ 129 (56) |
| Financial satisfaction | 8, 5–9 |
| PD-duration (years) | 8, 5–13 |
| PD-severity (Hoehn & Yahr) | 2, 2–3 |
| Severity of motor symptoms (UPDRS part III) | 29, 21–39 |
| Cognitive function (MoCA) | 26, 23–28 |
| Non-motor symptoms (NMSQuest, total number reported) | 10, 6–14 |
MoCA the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (maximum score = 30; higher = better), NMSQuest Nonmotor Symptoms Questionnaire (scoring 0–30; higher = worse), PD Parkinson’s disease, UPDRS III Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale, motor examination (scoring 0–108; higher = worse), Hoehn & Yahr staging scale (scoring I–V; higher = worse), Financial satisfaction scoring 0–10 (higher = better)
aOne additional participant lived in special (assisted) housing
Descriptives of aspects of health among people with Parkinson’s disease, n = 231
| Total score | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable, Instrument | Number of items | Possible total scoring range, min-max | Median (q1-q3) unless other is stated | min-max |
| Functional limitations, HE | 12 | 0–12 | 4 (2–5) | 0–9 |
| Activities of Daily Living, PADLS | 1 | 1–5 | 2 (2–3) | 1–5 |
| Depressive symptoms, GDS-15 | 15 | 0–15 | 2 (1–4) | 0–15 |
| Autonomy, PWQ, mean (SD) | 9 | 1–5 | 3.6 (0.45) | 2.3–4.9 |
| Purpose in life, PWQ, mean (SD) | 9 | 1–5 | 3.3 (0.54) | 2.1–4.8 |
| Life satisfaction, item 1 LiSat-11 | 1 | 1–6 | 5 (4–5) | 1–6 |
Decimals are only given if the value is between two categories; results are rounded as to one decimal or two meaningful digits
HE the Housing Enabler (a higher value/score = more functional limitations), GDS-15 the Geriatric Depression Scale (higher = more depressive symptoms), LiSat-11 the Life Satisfaction Questionnaire (higher=”better”), PADLS the Parkinson's disease Activities of Daily Living Scale (higher = more severe difficulties/dependence), PWQ Psychological Wellbeing Questionnaire (higher=”better”)
Decriptives of physical environment barriers and perceived aspects of home among people with Parkinson’s disease, n = 231
| Total score | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable, Instrument | Number of items | Possible total scoring range, min-max | Median (q1-q3) | min-max |
| Environmental barriers, HE | 161 | 0–161 | 67 (59–73) | 32–86 |
| Usability in the home, UIMH | ||||
| Physical environmental aspects | 6 | 1–5 | 4.5 (4–5) | 1.8–5 |
| Activity aspects | 4 | 1–5 | 4.8 (4–5) | 1–5 |
| Meaning of home, MOH | ||||
| Behavioral aspects | 6 | 0–10 | 7.7 (6.7–9) | 2–10 |
| Cognitive emotional aspects | 10 | 0–10 | 8 (7.2–8.8) | 4.5–10 |
| Housing related external control beliefs, HCQ | ||||
| Combined (Subscales: powerful others + chance) | 16 | 1–5 | 2.4 (2–3) | 1–4.4 |
Decimals are only given if the value is between two categories
HE Housing Enabler (higher scores = more physical environmental barriers), UIMH Usability in My Home Questionnaire (higher scores = higher usability), MOH Meaning of Home Questionnaire (higher scores = stronger bonding/attachment to the home), HCQ Housing-related Control Beliefs Questionnaire (higher scores = more external control, i.e., “some other person, luck, chance or fate is perceived as explanatory factors for what happens”)
Canonical correlations: Relations of aspects of health and aspects of housing among people with PD, n = 231
| First canonical variate | Second canonical variate | |
|---|---|---|
| Canonical correlation | 0.68, | 0.33, |
| Canonical Ra | 0.46 | 0.11 |
| Aspects of health | Loadings / stnd.can.coeff. | Loadings / stnd.can.coeff. |
| Functional limitations (HE)b |
| 0.21 / 0.45 |
| Activities of Daily Living (PADLS)b |
| −0.05 / −0.26 |
| Depressive symptoms (GDS-15)b |
| −0.12 / −0.08 |
| Autonomy (PWQ)a |
| 0.10 / 0.03 |
| Purpose in life (PWQ)a |
|
|
| Life satisfaction (LiSat-11)a |
|
|
| Percent of variance (average of squared loadings) | 0.45 | 0.11 |
| Redundancy | 0.21 | 0.01 |
| Aspects of housing | ||
| Physical environmental barriers (HE)b | −0.19 / −0.29 | −0.21 / −0.17 |
| Usability- Activity aspects (UIMH)a |
|
|
| Usability- Physical environmental aspects (UIMH)a |
|
|
| Meaning of home- Behavioral aspects (MOH)c |
|
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| Meaning of home- Cognitive emotional aspects (MOH)c | −0.28 / 0.16 |
|
| External housing related control beliefs (HCQ)d |
|
|
| Percent of variance (average of squared loadings) | 0.30 | 0.23 |
Loadings above the cut-off value (0.35) are bolded. NB The second canonical variate was significant but should be interpreted with caution due to the small sample size and small degree of explained variance
HCQ Housing-related Control Beliefs Questionnaire, HE Housing Enabler, GDS-15 Geriatric Depression Scale, LiSat-11 (item1) Life Satisfaction Questionnaire, MOH Meaning of Home Questionnaire, PADLS Parkinson’s Disease (PD) Activities of Daily Living Scale, PWQ Psychological Wellbeing Questionnaire, UIMH Usability in My Home Questionnaire
aHigher scores = better
bHigher scores = worse
cHigher scores = mirror a stronger bonding/attachment to the home
dHigher scores = more external control