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Key messages
- Longer lifespans can be due to additional years of life being spent in good or poor health, or some combination of the two.
- The ‘health’ of older people can be measured in many ways, including using data on disease prevalence or self-reported health status, but it is perhaps best captured by measures of disability or functional impairment.
- Assessments of whether people in Europe are living longer in better or worse health depend to a large degree on the measure used.
- Most surveys on ageing measure functional independence in activities of daily living (ADLs) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs), which are then used to quantify health states and measure changes over time.
- Studies using comparative data from the Survey of Health, Ageing, and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) generally find increases in functional limitations in some countries and decreases in others.
- One overarching finding is that later cohorts of older people have much better cognitive functioning than earlier cohorts.
- There are major health inequities at older age across and within countries.
- While a definitive answer of whether older people in Europe are in better or worse health is impossible to obtain, what is clear is that health systems are important contributors to increases in life expectancies, decreases in severe disability, and better coping and functioning with chronic disease.
Contents
- About the series
- About this brief
- Acknowledgements
- Acronyms
- Executive summary
- Introduction
- Key concepts
- Expansion of morbidity
- Compression of morbidity
- Dynamic equilibrium
- How to make use of these scenarios?
- How to measure health and disability?
- Distinct but related concepts: impairment, disability and handicap
- Presence of chronic diseases as a measure of health?
- Compression of functional decline
- Summary measures of population health
- Latest evidence on subjective and objective health and disability measures
- What explains historical trends and what are the policy implications?
- Conclusions
- References
About the Series
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- Review Screening for Cognitive Impairment in Older Adults: An Evidence Update for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force[ 2013]Review Screening for Cognitive Impairment in Older Adults: An Evidence Update for the U.S. Preventive Services Task ForceLin JS, O'Connor E, Rossom RC, Perdue LA, Burda BU, Thompson M, Eckstrom E. 2013 Nov
- Executive cognitive abilities and functional status among community-dwelling older persons in the San Luis Valley Health and Aging Study.[J Am Geriatr Soc. 1998]Executive cognitive abilities and functional status among community-dwelling older persons in the San Luis Valley Health and Aging Study.Grigsby J, Kaye K, Baxter J, Shetterly SM, Hamman RF. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1998 May; 46(5):590-6.
- Factors associated with ADL/IADL disability in community dwelling older adults in the Irish longitudinal study on ageing (TILDA).[Disabil Rehabil. 2017]Factors associated with ADL/IADL disability in community dwelling older adults in the Irish longitudinal study on ageing (TILDA).Connolly D, Garvey J, McKee G. Disabil Rehabil. 2017 Apr; 39(8):809-816. Epub 2016 Apr 4.
- Comparison of cognitive and physical functioning of Europeans in 2004-05 and 2013.[Int J Epidemiol. 2018]Comparison of cognitive and physical functioning of Europeans in 2004-05 and 2013.Ahrenfeldt LJ, Lindahl-Jacobsen R, Rizzi S, Thinggaard M, Christensen K, Vaupel JW. Int J Epidemiol. 2018 Oct 1; 47(5):1518-1528.
- Living longer, but in better or worse health?Living longer, but in better or worse health?
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