Self-rated health among older adults in India: gender specific findings from National Sample Survey
Self-rated health among older adults in India: gender specific findings from National Sample Survey
Introduction: the self-rated health (SRH) is a widely adopted indicator of overall health. The sponge hypothesis suggests that predictive power of SRH is stronger among women compared to men. To gain a better understanding of how gender influences SRH, this study examined whether and what determinants of gender disparity exist current self-rated health (SRHcurrent) and change in SRH (SRHchange) among older adults in Indian setting.
Materials and methods: we used cross-sectional data from the 75th National Sample Survey Organizations (NSSO), collected from July 2017 to June 2018. The analytical sample constitutes 42,759 older individuals aged 60 years or older with 21,902 older men and 20,857 older women (eliminating two non-binary individuals). Outcome measures include two variables of poor/worse SRH status (SRHcurrent and SRHchange). We have calculated absolute gaps in the prevalence of poor SRHcurrent and worse SRHchange by background characteristics. We carried out binary logistic regression models to examine the predictors of poor SRHcurrent and worse SRHchange among older adults.
Results: the overall absolute gender gap in poor SRHcurrent was 3.27% and it was 0.58% in worse SRHchange. Older women had significantly higher odds of poor SRHcurrent [AOR = 1.09; CI = 0.99, 1.19] and worse SRHchange [AOR = 1.09; CI = 1.02, 1.16] compared to older men. Older adults belonging to middle-aged, oldest-old, economically dependent, not working, physically immobile, suffering from chronic diseases, belonging to Muslim religion, and Eastern region have found to have higher odds of poor SRHcurrent and worse SRHchange. Educational attainments showed lower odds of have poor SRHcurrent and worse SRHchange compared to those with no education. Respondents belonging to richest income quintile and those who were not covered by any health insurance, belonging to Schedule caste, OBC, Western and Southern regions are found to have lower odds of poor SRHcurrent and worse SRHchange. Compared to those in the urban residence, respondents from rural residence [AOR = 1.09; CI = 1.02, 1.16] had higher odds of worse SRHchange.
Conclusions: supporting the sponge hypothesis, a clear gender gap was observed in poor current SRH and worse change in SRH among older adults in India with a female disadvantage. We further found lower socioeconomic and health conditions and lack of resources as determinants of poor current SRH and its worse change, which is crucial to address the challenge of the older people’s health and their perception of well-being.
Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz
aa7e6bda-4317-4905-bbde-1582a6a7bf58
Saikia, Nandita
62aac0cc-9c33-4a67-a6a6-fb71089c21d1
Muhammad, T.
d58fc0db-9207-4251-9a89-f198a4cb9925
Navaneetham, Kannan
4574393c-3a20-4c97-8638-a8d8c8e9fb88
17 April 2023
Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz
aa7e6bda-4317-4905-bbde-1582a6a7bf58
Saikia, Nandita
62aac0cc-9c33-4a67-a6a6-fb71089c21d1
Muhammad, T.
d58fc0db-9207-4251-9a89-f198a4cb9925
Navaneetham, Kannan
4574393c-3a20-4c97-8638-a8d8c8e9fb88
Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz, Saikia, Nandita and Muhammad, T.
,
Navaneetham, Kannan
(ed.)
(2023)
Self-rated health among older adults in India: gender specific findings from National Sample Survey.
PLoS ONE, 18 (4), [e0284321].
(doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0284321).
Abstract
Introduction: the self-rated health (SRH) is a widely adopted indicator of overall health. The sponge hypothesis suggests that predictive power of SRH is stronger among women compared to men. To gain a better understanding of how gender influences SRH, this study examined whether and what determinants of gender disparity exist current self-rated health (SRHcurrent) and change in SRH (SRHchange) among older adults in Indian setting.
Materials and methods: we used cross-sectional data from the 75th National Sample Survey Organizations (NSSO), collected from July 2017 to June 2018. The analytical sample constitutes 42,759 older individuals aged 60 years or older with 21,902 older men and 20,857 older women (eliminating two non-binary individuals). Outcome measures include two variables of poor/worse SRH status (SRHcurrent and SRHchange). We have calculated absolute gaps in the prevalence of poor SRHcurrent and worse SRHchange by background characteristics. We carried out binary logistic regression models to examine the predictors of poor SRHcurrent and worse SRHchange among older adults.
Results: the overall absolute gender gap in poor SRHcurrent was 3.27% and it was 0.58% in worse SRHchange. Older women had significantly higher odds of poor SRHcurrent [AOR = 1.09; CI = 0.99, 1.19] and worse SRHchange [AOR = 1.09; CI = 1.02, 1.16] compared to older men. Older adults belonging to middle-aged, oldest-old, economically dependent, not working, physically immobile, suffering from chronic diseases, belonging to Muslim religion, and Eastern region have found to have higher odds of poor SRHcurrent and worse SRHchange. Educational attainments showed lower odds of have poor SRHcurrent and worse SRHchange compared to those with no education. Respondents belonging to richest income quintile and those who were not covered by any health insurance, belonging to Schedule caste, OBC, Western and Southern regions are found to have lower odds of poor SRHcurrent and worse SRHchange. Compared to those in the urban residence, respondents from rural residence [AOR = 1.09; CI = 1.02, 1.16] had higher odds of worse SRHchange.
Conclusions: supporting the sponge hypothesis, a clear gender gap was observed in poor current SRH and worse change in SRH among older adults in India with a female disadvantage. We further found lower socioeconomic and health conditions and lack of resources as determinants of poor current SRH and its worse change, which is crucial to address the challenge of the older people’s health and their perception of well-being.
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journal.pone.0284321
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 March 2023
Published date: 17 April 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 491390
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491390
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: b8d06c93-1947-4468-b999-c673aaf8ddd6
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Date deposited: 21 Jun 2024 16:39
Last modified: 22 Jun 2024 02:11
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Author:
Saddaf Naaz Akhtar
Author:
Nandita Saikia
Author:
T. Muhammad
Editor:
Kannan Navaneetham
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