Title of article :
Socio-economic inequalities in physical functioning: a comparative study of English and Greek elderly men
Author/Authors :
TABASSUM، FAIZA نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
The associations between socio-economic position (SEP) and physical functioning
have frequently been investigated but little is known about which measures of
SEP are the best to use for older people. This study examined how different SEP
indicators related to the physical functioning of men aged 50 or more years in
England and Greece. The data derived from Wave 1 of the English Longitudinal
Study of Ageing (ELSA) and from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement
in Europe (SHARE). Self-reported physical functioning limitations and mobility
difficulties were combined and categorised into ‘no disability ’, ‘mild disability ’
and ‘severe disability ’. The SEP indicators studied were: wealth, educational
level and occupational class. The findings indicate that respondents with less
wealth, fewer educational qualifications and lower occupational class were more
likely to experience mild or severe physical disability than those of high SEP.
When all three measures of SEP were adjusted for each other, in both samples
wealth maintained a strong association with mild and severe disability, while
education was associated with severe disability but only among English men.
Occupational class was not strongly associated with physical disability in either
case. Hence, among English and Greek older men, wealth was a more important
predictor of physical functioning difficulties than either occupational class or
education.
Keywords :
Occupational , men , Education , England , Greece , FAIZA TABASSUM , physical functioning , Older people , Wealth , class
Journal title :
Ageing and Society
Journal title :
Ageing and Society