Factors Influencing Long-Term Care Service Needs among the Elderly Based on the Latest Anderson Model: A Case Study from the Middle and Upper Reaches of the Yangtze River

Healthcare (Basel). 2019 Dec 3;7(4):157. doi: 10.3390/healthcare7040157.

Abstract

The rapid growth of population aging makes providing adequate long-term care (LTC) services for the elderly a serious social dilemma in China. Thus, it is necessary to carry out a theoretical discussion on the LTC service needs of the elderly and find out their influencing factors. With four regions of the middle and upper reaches of the Yangtze River as the sample case, this study aims to explore the factors that affect LTC service needs of the elderly in the frame of the latest Anderson Model, which added psychosocial factors to predisposing characteristics, enabling factors, and need factors in the old version. Some interesting results have been found, for example, self-image evaluation is composed of several factors such as general physical health, attitude towards life, or psychosocial states. Finally, sub-analyses-namely, by age, by gender, and by educational level-were carried out since the choice of different long-term care service patterns is related to different age/gender/education groups.

Keywords: income; long-term care; long-term care insurance; psychosocial factors; the elderly; the latest Anderson Model.