Relationship between unmet needs for assistance and healthy aging among disabled older adults in China

Front Public Health. 2022 Jul 20:10:914313. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.914313. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Background: Although there is a growing consensus around the world that long-term care services and supports are important to help the aged population with disabilities achieve healthy aging, a misallocation of care resources and inefficiency in care delivery still exist in China. The absence or inadequate provision of long-term care services and supports among older adults with disabilities results in a range of adverse health consequences. However, the negative influence of unmet needs for assistance on healthy aging, based on functional perspectives including physiological, psychological, and societal domains, has been underestimated. This study aimed to measure healthy aging based on a person-centered approach and examine the relationship between unmet needs for assistance and healthy aging among older adults with disabilities in China.

Methods: Based on the data from the Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey 2018, we used the latent profile analysis with three indicators to uncover distinctive types of older adults experiencing distinct levels of healthy aging, and applied the ordered logit regression to analyze the correlation between unmet needs for assistance and different levels of healthy aging. To further address the endogeneity bias, the robust test was conducted by the two-stage least-squares instrumental variable estimation and the conditional mixed process instrumental variable estimation.

Results: Three ordered latent classes were identified: a low level of healthy aging (42.83%), a middle level of healthy aging (47.27%), and a high level of healthy aging (9.90%). Disabled older adults with unmet needs had a lower probability of achieving the higher level of healthy aging (OR = 0.57, SE = 0.04, CI = 0.48-0.66, p < 0.001).

Conclusions: This study highlights the need to increase awareness among gerontological practitioners with respect to long-term care services and supports for disabled older adults as a potential for enhancing their healthy aging, and that unmet needs could be a basis for risk assessment and a means for determining the efficacy of long-term care interventions on maintaining health.

Keywords: activities of daily living; cognition; health; participation; unmet needs.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Activities of Daily Living
  • Aged
  • China
  • Disabled Persons* / psychology
  • Health Services Needs and Demand
  • Healthy Aging*
  • Humans