| Literature DB >> 31940338 |
E-Shien Chang1, Sneha Kannoth2, Samantha Levy1, Shi-Yi Wang2, John E Lee3, Becca R Levy1,4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Although there is anecdotal evidence of ageism occurring at both the structural level (in which societal institutions reinforce systematic bias against older persons) and individual level (in which older persons take in the negative views of aging of their culture), previous systematic reviews have not examined how both levels simultaneously influence health. Thus, the impact of ageism may be underestimated. We hypothesized that a comprehensive systematic review would reveal that these ageism levels adversely impact the health of older persons across geography, health outcomes, and time.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31940338 PMCID: PMC6961830 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0220857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart of selection of ageism-health studies.
Evidence of ageism as indicated by significant studies and significant associations across 11 health domains.
| Significant Ageism Studies | Significant Ageism Associations | |
|---|---|---|
| % (n) | % (n) | |
| 100.0 (49) | 94.4 (70) | |
| 100.0 (3) | 80.0 (4) | |
| 89.6 (60) | 80.8 (97) | |
| 84.6 (141) | 63.0 (376) | |
| 100.0 (10) | 85.7 (12) | |
| 100.0 (29) | 93.3 (42) | |
| 100.0 (27) | 79.4 (50) | |
| 100.0 (13) | 82.5 (47) | |
| 96.2 (50) | 80.9 (72) | |
| 95.5 (42) | 93.2 (82) | |
| 80.0 (4) | 85.7 (6) |
a As some studies included multiple outcomes, the total number of studies exceeded the number of articles included in the review. Percentages may not sum to 100% due to rounding.
b All ageism studies and associations in the review either showed a significant effect in the predicted direction with ageism predicting worse health or showed no significant association. None of the studies showed the reverse direction with ageism significantly predicting better health. Thus, in the current table, we presented the percentage of the studies or associations in each domain that were significant in the predicted direction and give the total number of studies to give overview. For instance, in the mental illness category, there were 82 predicted significant associations between ageism and worse health, which was 93.2% of the total 88 associations in this category. The remaining 6 associations (88–82 = 6) did not reach significance.
c Significant ageism studies are defined as studies that showed at least one significant association at the p < .05 level between ageism and adverse-health outcome. Significant association between ageism and adverse health is defined as the p < .05 level.
Fig 2Impact of ageism on health in 11 health domains: Distribution of studies.
Fig 3Ageism adversely impacted health across geography, time, and characteristics of studies, targets, and targeters.
Fig 4Geographic distribution of ageism studies across 45 countries.
Fig 5Research attention given to structural-level and individual-level ageism on health studies over time.