Nihon Koshu Eisei Zasshi(JAPANESE JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH)
Online ISSN : 2187-8986
Print ISSN : 0546-1766
ISSN-L : 0546-1766
Original article
Chronological evaluation of physical, psychological and social health of urban elderly dwellers over 6 years and assessment of causal inter-relationships
Tanji HOSHIChika TAKAGIYoshinori BOSAKONaoko NAKAYAMASuwen YANSugako KURIMORITakashi HASEGAWANaoko INOUEChisako YAMAMOTOToshihiko TAKAHASHINaoko SAKURAIYoshinori FUJIWARA
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2011 Volume 58 Issue 7 Pages 491-500

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Abstract

Objectives The purpose of this study is to make a chronological evaluation over 6 years of physical, psychological and social health of urban elderly dwellers.
Methods A questionnaire survey was conducted with all urban elderly dwellers of 65 years old or more in A City in September, 2001. Answers were obtained from 13,195 people (response rate of 80.2%) in the first survey. Then 3 year and 6 year follow-up surveys of 2,375 members were performed in September 2004 and 2007. Causal relationships were analyzed using a Structural Equation Model based on the Cross-Lagged Effects Variation Model.
Results According to this research, a chronological six year trend in ADL (Activities of Daily Living) was found for “physical factor” (“ ” means latent variable) as an observed variable, with a shifted from 91.0% to 82.9%. A trend for self-rated health with healthy as an observed variable of “psychological factor” was similarly apparent, shifting from 85.4% to 77.0%.
 “Social factor” conducted on the follow-up survey in 2007 was significantly affected by the “psychological factor” investigated in 2001 and “physical factor” in the follow-up survey in 2004, indirectly based on the Cross-Lagged Effects Variation Model. “Social factor” totals of 25% for men and 19% for women were explained by this model with high validity levels (NFI=0.935, IFI=0.950, RMSEA=0.036).
Conclusion It was suggested that social health was affected by psychological health directly and physical health indirectly during six years follow-up of urban elderly dwellers. Future research is needed to encompass other generations and also to improve the external validity of the results.

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© 2011 Japanese Society of Public Health
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