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'On the street where you live': neighbourhood deprivation and quality of life among community-dwelling older people in Edinburgh, Scotland

'On the street where you live': neighbourhood deprivation and quality of life among community-dwelling older people in Edinburgh, Scotland
'On the street where you live': neighbourhood deprivation and quality of life among community-dwelling older people in Edinburgh, Scotland
It is well established that neighbourhood quality is related to various aspects of people's health and coping, especially in old age. There have also been a few reports on the links between self-reported neighbourhood quality and quality of life in older age. However, it is not clear which aspects of quality of life in particular are related to neighbourhood quality and whether these associations are independent of the roles of cognitive, socioeconomic or health status, or rating biases. Using a large sample of Scots from the Edinburgh area (N = 1091, of whom 548 were men) aged between 68 and 71 years, this study shows direct associations of objectively and comprehensively determined neighbourhood deprivation with self-perceived quality of life in physical and environmental domains, but not in psychological or social relationship domains. In a path model, these associations were independent of the roles of childhood cognitive ability and change in it to age 70, educational attainment, and occupational social class. The count of adverse health conditions (cardiovascular disease, stroke history, high blood pressure, diabetes, or arthritis) was associated with both quality of life and neighbourhood deprivation, and mediated the indirect links from neighbourhood deprivation to physical, psychological and environmental domains of quality of life. It is concluded that the neighbourhood in which older people live plays a role in one of the most important outcomes-how satisfied they are with various aspects of their life including physical functioning.
neighbourhood deprivation, quality of life, wellbeing, ageing, scotland, uk
0277-9536
1368-1374
Mõttus, René
d17f4786-a4c4-48fe-86e2-94ab694fc5d6
Gale, Catharine R.
5bb2abb3-7b53-42d6-8aa7-817e193140c8
Starr, John M.
92fc6cf8-b0f7-47dc-93d8-8fd246d40585
Deary, Ian J.
027158ae-fbfb-40ea-98b1-32d2690499ac
Mõttus, René
d17f4786-a4c4-48fe-86e2-94ab694fc5d6
Gale, Catharine R.
5bb2abb3-7b53-42d6-8aa7-817e193140c8
Starr, John M.
92fc6cf8-b0f7-47dc-93d8-8fd246d40585
Deary, Ian J.
027158ae-fbfb-40ea-98b1-32d2690499ac

Mõttus, René, Gale, Catharine R., Starr, John M. and Deary, Ian J. (2012) 'On the street where you live': neighbourhood deprivation and quality of life among community-dwelling older people in Edinburgh, Scotland. Social Science & Medicine, 74 (9), 1368-1374. (doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.12.050). (PMID:22401647)

Record type: Article

Abstract

It is well established that neighbourhood quality is related to various aspects of people's health and coping, especially in old age. There have also been a few reports on the links between self-reported neighbourhood quality and quality of life in older age. However, it is not clear which aspects of quality of life in particular are related to neighbourhood quality and whether these associations are independent of the roles of cognitive, socioeconomic or health status, or rating biases. Using a large sample of Scots from the Edinburgh area (N = 1091, of whom 548 were men) aged between 68 and 71 years, this study shows direct associations of objectively and comprehensively determined neighbourhood deprivation with self-perceived quality of life in physical and environmental domains, but not in psychological or social relationship domains. In a path model, these associations were independent of the roles of childhood cognitive ability and change in it to age 70, educational attainment, and occupational social class. The count of adverse health conditions (cardiovascular disease, stroke history, high blood pressure, diabetes, or arthritis) was associated with both quality of life and neighbourhood deprivation, and mediated the indirect links from neighbourhood deprivation to physical, psychological and environmental domains of quality of life. It is concluded that the neighbourhood in which older people live plays a role in one of the most important outcomes-how satisfied they are with various aspects of their life including physical functioning.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 18 February 2012
Published date: May 2012
Keywords: neighbourhood deprivation, quality of life, wellbeing, ageing, scotland, uk
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 340507
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/340507
ISSN: 0277-9536
PURE UUID: 81e512ff-802d-4284-aefd-118755c47d15
ORCID for Catharine R. Gale: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3361-8638

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 22 Jun 2012 13:22
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:49

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Contributors

Author: René Mõttus
Author: John M. Starr
Author: Ian J. Deary

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