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1.
OBJECTIVES: To estimate disability-free life expectancy according to three functional levels. DESIGN: A 2-year prospective study of older residents in a rural Japanese community. The functional ability of each individual was determined with self-completed questionnaires at baseline (1994) and at follow-up (1996). SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: All residents of Wakuya Town, Japan, who were aged 65 years or older at the start of the study in 1994 (n = 3590). MEASUREMENTS: Single-year increment-decrement life tables were constructed from mortality rates and incidence of disability rates. Independent life expectancies in three functional areas: basic activities of daily living (ADL), instrumental activities of daily living (IADL), and mobility, were estimated for each sex and each year of age. RESULTS: The incidence and prevalence of disability were similar in men and women. For both sexes, independent life in IADL was shorter than independent life in ADL and mobility. The development and progression of disability were different between sexes: men experienced disability at a younger age and at a faster rate than women. CONCLUSIONS: The slow progress of disability, with a longer duration in a disabled state among women, induces a heavy burden on health and welfare resources. Interventions to delay the onset of disability in women should reduce the economic burden to society as well as improve the quality of life. Prospective studies to look at the process of disablement, based on direct observation, are needed to confirm the gender differences.  相似文献   

2.
Objectives:   To examine functional transitions in activities of daily living (ADL) over a one-year interval among older Japanese living in a rural community, and to estimate their active life expectancy (ALE) based on ADL.
Design:   A prospective cohort study.
Setting:   A community-based environment.
Participants:   A total of 1069 residents aged 65 or older in Nangai Village, Akita, Japan
Measurements:   A structured interviewed questionnaire, which involved age, sex, and four ADL items, was used for each survey in both 1996 and 1997. We defined functional dependency in ADL as a loss of independence in any ADL item. In addition, we defined ALE as the average number of remaining life years free of ADL dependence at a given age.
Results:   Of the baseline cohort ( n  = 1069), we received 1068 analyzable questionnaires at the follow-up survey in 1997. During the follow-up, 95% of subjects who were initially independent in ADL remained independent. Active life expectancies for men and women were estimated to be 15.4 and 17.8 more years at 65 years of age, respectively.
Conclusion:   The study revealed that women had longer average life years than men in terms of ADL disabilities.  相似文献   

3.
The objectives of this study were to understand transition patterns and mechanisms of functional status, and to estimate active life expectancy (ALE) among senior citizens in a small town in Japan. With data drawn from surveys conducted annually from 1998 to 2002 (n=638 at baseline), prevalence and incidence of functional disability in activities of daily living (ADL) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) were described and compared between the sexes. Then relationships between potential predictors and functional decline through a 4-year follow-up were examined using logistic regression. Finally, active and disabled life expectancy was estimated by Katz's method. At baseline, 9 and 12% of subjects were dependent in performing ADL and IADL, respectively. Prevalence and incidence rates increased with age. The risk of mortality increased by 2.2-5.0-fold when the subject was functionally dependent at the previous year. Advanced age, difficulty in walking and poor interest were shown to be significant predictors of loss of independence in ADL. Mean durations with disability in ADL and IADL among women were longer than among men by around 1 year. Population-specific preventive care programs considering physical, cognitive and social aspects are needed not only to maximize ALE but also to improve quality of life during survival period with disability especially in old women.  相似文献   

4.
We examined functional transitions in both the activities of daily living (ADL), and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL), over a 1-year interval among older Japanese living in a community, then estimated their physically active life expectancy (PALE) and instrumentally active life expectancy (IALE). In 1992, all residents aged 65 or older who lived in Saku City, Nagano, Japan, were followed-up over the 1-year interval. A self-administrated questionnaire, which involved age, sex, five ADL items, and five IADL items, was used for each survey in both 1992 and 1993. Of the baseline cohort (n=10,098), we received 9533 analyzable questionnaires at the follow-up survey in 1993. During the follow-up, 92 and 87% of subjects who were initially independent in ADL and IADL remained independent, respectively. PALE for men and women were estimated to be 16.0 and 18.9 at 65 years of age, respectively. IALE for men and for women were estimated to be 12.8 and 14.6 at the age of 65, respectively. Proportions of the PALE to total life expectancy (TLE) at any age did not greatly differ between men and women; however, men had a slightly larger proportion of IALE to TLE at any given age than women.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: This paper examines recent trends in the prevalence of disability and disability-free life expectancy in the population aged 65 years and older in Spain. METHODS: Data were drawn from two National Disability, Impairment and Handicap Surveys conducted in 1986 and 1999. Only severe disability was studied, and disabilities overcome through use of external technical aids were included. RESULTS: In the period 1986--1999, a relative annual decline of 3.7% in overall disability was observed for men. The decline was somewhat less marked in women, participants aged 75 years and older, and those with the lowest educational level. In men, there was a relative annual decline of just over 3% in walking and hearing disabilities, of under 1% in seeing and cognitive disabilities, and a slight rise in self-care disability. Trends among women were similar, though self-care disability rose by 1.78%. In the period 1986--1999, total and disability-free life expectancy rose across all age groups in both sexes. Among men aged 65 years, the proportion of life expectancy with disability fell from 42.1% in 1986 to 21.6% in 1999; the comparable figures for women were 49.8% in 1986 and 30.6% in 1999. Indeed, a reduction in life expectancy with disability was observed even among persons aged 80 years and older. CONCLUSION: From 1986 through 1999, prevalence of severe disability among Spanish elderly persons decreased substantially, and the duration of life with disability was compressed between a later onset and the time of death. Among women, however, self-care disability--the type of disability requiring most social resources for its attention--underwent a sharp rise.  相似文献   

6.
In countries with low mortality rates, the quality of the years of life is more important to consider than total life expectancy (TLE). Disability-free life expectancy (DFLE) is one of the most relevant indicators of health and the quality of life. This paper aims to estimate TLE and DFLE with four levels of severity of disability and to explore gender and educational differences in older French people. In this cohort study, four levels of disability severity were distinguished, disability being evaluated for mobility, instrumental and basic activities of daily living. For each level, TLE and DFLE were calculated using multi-state models from transition probabilities. From the population of two areas of South West France 3,777 subjects were randomly selected from the electoral rolls. At the baseline, they were aged 65 years and over, living in the community and were interviewed 6 times over the 10-year follow-up. At age 65, women lived longer than men (4.5 extra years), but shorter fully independent lives (−2.2 years). They also lived longer in each of the three degrees of disability (+4.2 years with moderate or severe disability). The higher educated lived longer (1.3 extra years at age 65), with the additional years free of disability. Regardless of age, gender and education, there appeared to be a 1-year incompressible time spent with severe disability. To conclude, these are the first health expectancies based on the longitudinal data for France. Whilst most of the studies were based on cross-sectional data, this paper gives a more realistic indicator of the health and socio-economic inequalities in France in the 1990 s.  相似文献   

7.
The burden of diseases on disability-free life expectancy in later life   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
BACKGROUND: The consequences of diseases in later life have been judged predominantly through mortality, resulting in an emphasis on the fatal rather than the nonfatal disabling conditions. We use a longitudinal study with follow-up at 2, 6, and 10 years to assess the impact of different diseases on both total life expectancy (TLE) and disability-free life expectancy (DFLE). METHODS: The Medical Research Council Cognitive Function and Ageing Study investigators interviewed 13,004 people aged 65 years and older from five U.K. centers starting in 1991. Persons aged 75 years and older were oversampled. Disability (mild, moderate, and severe) was assessed through basic Activities of Daily Living (ADL) and Instrumental ADL (IADL) scales at baseline and at follow-ups at 2, 6, and 10 years. TLE and DFLE were compared for persons with and without each of nine conditions. RESULTS: At age 65, men had a TLE of 15.3 years of which 12.1 (79%) were free of any disability, whereas women of the same age had an average TLE of 19.4 years, 11.0 years (57%) disability-free. Men (women) aged 65 years without stroke had 4.8 (4.6) more years of TLE and 6.5 (5.8) more years DFLE. Without diabetes, men (women) lived 4.4 (5.6) years longer and had 4.1 (5.1) years disability-free. CONCLUSIONS: More disability-free years were gained than total life years in persons free of stroke, cognitive impairment, arthritis, and/or visual impairment at baseline. This finding suggests that elimination of these conditions would result in a compression of disability.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND: the major purpose of health and social policy in old age is to increase quality of life of elderly people. In many demographically developing countries, life expectancy is increasing very rapidly, but little information is available on survival free of disability. OBJECTIVES: to determine prevalence and severity of disability among the elderly population and to compare disability-free life expectancy and self-care life expectancy among different age groups and between men and women. DESIGN: a cross-sectional multi-stage random sample survey and routine life tables for Thailand. SETTING: national population of Thailand. SUBJECTS: 4,048 elderly subjects aged 60+ years. RESULTS: prevalence rates (95% CI) of long-term disability and dependency in self-care activities of daily living were 19% (95% CI 17.8, 20.2) and 6.9% (6.1, 7.7) respectively. Rates of disabilities increased with age and women were more disabled than men. The life expectancy and disability-free life expectancy at age 60 for men were 20.3 years and 16.4 years, and for women were 23.9 years and 18.2 years respectively. Self-care life expectancies at age 60, calculated from the prevalence of needing help with basic self-care activities, were 18.6 years and 21.3 years for men and women respectively. Women spent proportionately more of their longer life expectancy in a disabled state than men. Men and women can, respectively, expect that 19% and 24% of their life expectancy at age 60 will be spent in a disabled state, but may expect only about 10% of their life expectancy to be spent unable to manage basic self-care activities of daily living. CONCLUSION: long-term disability is common in old age, affecting a quarter of people over 60 years. However, self-care problems are much less common and suggest that the social and health care consequences of demographic transitions are over-estimated by use of simple questions about limiting long-standing disability. Self-care life expectancy provides a useful monitoring tool for censuses and national disability surveys.  相似文献   

9.
ObjectivesTo examine differences in incidence of functional disability between older women and men.Methods2002 participants (65–74 years) were recruited in 2012 from Canada, Brazil, Colombia, and Albania, and re-assessed in 2016. Three measures of functional disability were used (1) Difficulty in any of five mobility-related Activities of Daily Living (ADL disability); (2) Self-reported difficulty climbing a flight of stairs or walking 400 m (mobility disability); and (3) Poor physical performance. We estimated the adjusted gender-specific incidence risk ratios (IRR) for each outcome in 2016.ResultsIn 2016, 1506 participants (52% women) were re-examined, 80% of the surviving cohort. Among those not disabled in 2012, seventy-four (12.9%) men developed ADL disability, while 105 (19.2%) developed mobility disability, and 97 (16.1%) developed poor physical performance. For women, numbers were higher 120 (21.4%) developed ADL disability, 117 (26.5%) developed mobility disability, and 140 (23.0%) developed poor physical performance. Compared to men, women had a higher adjusted incidence of self-reported ADL disability (IRR 1.4; 95% CI 1.04–1.88) and mobility disability (IRR 1.4; 95% CI 1.06–1.77), but not of poor physical performance (IRR 1.03; 95% CI 0.88–1.32).ConclusionsAlthough women have a higher self-reported incidence of ADL and mobility disability than men, there was no significant difference in poor physical performance. Reasons for this discrepancy between self-reported and performance-based measures require further investigation. Understanding gender differences in functional disabilities can provide the basis for interventions to prevent mobility loss and minimize any gender gap.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVES: To estimate active and cognitive impairment-free life expectancy at older ages from longitudinal data collected during two consecutive rounds of health checks for patients aged > or =75 years. SETTING: A single, large general practice serving Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, UK, and its surrounding area. Outcome measures: active life expectancy was defined by independence in seven activities of daily living (mobility, transfer from bed, transfer from chair, bathing, feeding, dressing, using the toilet). Cognitive impairment was defined by a score of < or =7 on the information/orientation subtest of the Clifton Assessment Procedures of the Elderly. RESULTS: We assessed 1557 people aged > or =75 years at baseline. Active life expectancy at age 75 was 4.6 years for men and 3.1 years for women (50.5 and 29.2% of remaining life). Cognitive impairment-free life expectancy at age 75 was 8.4 years for men and 9.9 years for women (92.3 and 93.4% of remaining life). The proportion of active life decreased dramatically with age in both sexes: after the age of 87, almost all of remaining life was spent with some activity restriction. The proportion of life free from cognitive impairment, in comparison, decreased slowly in men and remained relatively constant in women at around 90%. CONCLUSIONS: The extra years lived by women over men appear to be spent with some form of activity restriction, although not all with cognitive impairment. Monitoring these trends over time will be important to ascertain whether we are exchanging longer life for poorer health.  相似文献   

11.
PURPOSE: To assess the effect of education on Disability Free Life Expectancy among older Italians, using a hierarchical model as indicator of disability, with estimates based on the multistate life table method and IMaCh software. METHODS: Data were obtained from the Italian Longitudinal Study on Aging which considered a random sample of 5632 individuals. RESULTS: Total life expectancy ranged from 16.5 years for men aged 65 years to 6 years for men aged 80. The age range for women was 19.6 and 8.4 years, respectively. For both sexes, increasing age was associated with a lower probability of recovery from a mild state of disability, with a greater probability of worsening for all individuals presenting an independent state at baseline, and with a greater probability of dying except for women from a mild state of disability. A medium/high educational level was associated with a greater probability of recovery only in men with a mild state of disability at baseline, and with a lower probability of worsening in both sexes, except for men with a mild state of disability at baseline. DISCUSSION: The positive effects of high education are well established in most research work and, being a modifiable factor, strategies focused on increasing level of education and, hence strengthening access to information and use of health services would produce significant benefits.  相似文献   

12.
Disability-free life expectancy (DFLE) was compared in six countries taking part in the Cross-national Determinants of Quality of Life and Health Services for the Elderly (CLESA) project. Data from six existing longitudinal studies were used: TamELSA (Tampere, Finland), CALAS (Israel), ILSA (Italy), LASA (The Netherlands), Aging in Leganés (Leganés, Spain) and SATSA (Sweden). A harmonised four-item disability measure (bathing, dressing, transferring, toileting) was used to calculate DFLE; the harmonised measure was dichotomised into independent in all four activities vs. dependent in at least one. Calculations of DFLE were made using the multistate life table approach and the IMaCh program (INED/EuroREVES, ) for subjects aged 65–89 years. Prevalence ratios of disability varied significantly across countries, with Italy and Leganés having the highest percentages among men and among women, respectively, while The Netherlands presented the lowest for both sexes. At 75 years of age the estimated total life expectancy among men ranged from 7.8 years in Tampere and Sweden to 9.0 years in Israel; among women it ranged from 9.5 years in Israel to 11.6 years in Italy. For both sexes Italy showed the lowest total life expectancy without disability (72% among men, 61% among women) and Sweden the highest (89% among men and 71% among women). The results yielded a north/south gradient, with residents in Tampere, The Netherlands and Sweden expected to spend a higher percentage of their lives without disability than those in Italy, Israel and Leganés.  相似文献   

13.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Our aim was to provide age- and sex-stratified prevalence estimates of physical disabilities and handicap in the general Belgian population. METHODS: A cross-sectional and demographically representative health interview survey was conducted nationwide in Belgium in 1997. The 8836 persons aged 15 years and over who answered the health interview were included in this study. Seventeen items from the survey encompassing main activities of daily living (ADL) and confining were analyzed. To provide prevalence estimates as detailed as possible, neither aggregation nor dichotomization were applied. RESULTS: Women consistently reported more disability than men: mobility (p < 0.001), transfer in-out bed (p < 0.001), transfer in-out chair (p < 0.001), dressing (p = 0.004), washing hands and face (p = 0.029), getting to and using toilet (p = 0.003), continence (p < 0.001), seeing (p < 0.001) and mastication (p < 0.001). As expected, there was a marked trend for increased prevalence of disability with increasing age for both sexes. Moderate disability arose mainly from the 25-34 age group for both sexes. For both genders, severe disability appeared mainly at higher ages, particularly for the 65-74 age group. Nevertheless, the data suggest that continence problems for women, mobility and transfer issues for men, as well as mastication problems for both genders, clearly emerge earlier than age 65. Regarding handicap, observed prevalence rates were increasing, in age as was the case for disability, but no differences were found between men or women, except for confinement to house/garden, for which women presented a higher rate in general (p < 0.001) and in the 75-84 age group (p = 0.036) in particular. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows the wide range of disability types in the general population and their association with handicap. While elderly individuals consistently report higher degrees of disability and handicap, attention should also be paid to younger age groups. Disability calls for wide, coherent and relevant medical as well as social responses.  相似文献   

14.
Limited information exists about the consequences of hypertension during adulthood on residual life expectancy with cardiovascular disease. We aimed to analyze the life course of people with high blood pressure levels at age 50 in terms of total life expectancy and life expectancy with and without cardiovascular disease compared with normotensives. We constructed multistate life tables for cardiovascular disease, myocardial infarction, and stroke using data from 3128 participants of the Framingham Heart Study who had their 50th birthday while enrolled in the study. For the life table calculations, we used hazard ratios for 3 transitions (healthy to death, healthy to disease, and disease to death) by categories of blood pressure level and adjusted by age, sex, and confounders. Irrespective of sex, 50-year-old hypertensives compared with normotensives had a shorter life expectancy, a shorter life expectancy free of cardiovascular disease, myocardial infarction, and stroke, and a longer life expectancy lived with these diseases. Normotensive men (22% of men) survived 7.2 years (95% confidence interval, 5.6 to 9.0) longer without cardiovascular disease compared with hypertensives and spent 2.1 (0.9 to 3.4) fewer years of life with cardiovascular disease. Similar differences were observed in women. Compared with hypertensives, total life expectancy was 5.1 and 4.9 years longer for normotensive men and women, respectively. Increased blood pressure in adulthood is associated with large reductions in life expectancy and more years lived with cardiovascular disease. This effect is larger than estimated previously and affects both sexes similarly. Our findings underline the tremendous importance of preventing high blood pressure and its consequences in the population.  相似文献   

15.
Active life expectancies (ALEs) were calculated using increment-decrement life table techniques for 10,000 Caucasian men and women from three geographic areas. This technique is more appropriate than the single decrement model originally used, and resulting ALE was substantially greater among initially independent men and women aged 65 years: from 9.3 for men and 10.6 for women to 11.3 to 13.0 for men and 15.5 to 17.1 for women. These increases may be attributable to factors other than the change of method, however, including the change in time from 1975 to 1982 and the change from one state to three communities. The sex differences suggest that the added years of life that women have enjoyed over men are neither solely added years of vigor nor solely added years of disability, but added years with the same mix of independence/dependence that the shorter-lived males experience. The age patterns suggest that at any age the future presents a relatively constant expectation of the total duration of dependency, and concordantly, as one ages, there is a relatively uniform decrease in the proportion of active life to remaining years.  相似文献   

16.
Aim: To identify individuals at hierarchical levels of physical disability by using physical performance tests and to determine threshold values for the discriminating of levels of physical disability in women aged 75 years or older. Methods: A cross‐sectional observational study was conducted on 306 community‐dwelling women aged 75 years or order (range, 75–99 years). Physical disability was categorized into no disability, mobility disability and activities of daily living (ADL) disability, by evaluating selected ADL and mobility‐related functional tasks. Physical function tests comprised nine items (such as strength, balance, mobility and walking ability). To assess the observed threshold values, receiver–operator curves were prepared for all the scales. Results: The results revealed significant differences among all the pairwise group comparisons in all the performance tests, except in the one‐legged stance, tandem stance and tandem walk tests. The individuals with ADL disability were unable to perform the one‐legged stance (28.9%), tandem stance (32.5%), functional reach (19.3%), tandem walk (61.4%), alternate step (53.0%) and 5‐chair sit‐to‐stand (31.3%) tests. The observed thresholds for discriminating between the no disability and mobility disability groups and between the mobility disability and ADL disability groups were as follows: timed Up & Go test, 8.5 s and 12.7 s; usual gait speed, 1.05 m/s and 0.79 m/s; and grip strength, 19.5 kg and 16.3 kg, respectively. Conclusion: Tests for balance and lower extremity strength can be used together to identify or monitor the characteristics of the hierarchical levels of physical disability in women aged 75 years or older. Geriatr Gerontol Int 2010; 10: 302–310.  相似文献   

17.
目的研究认知障碍对北京市城乡≥60岁人群的预期寿命(LE)、健康预期寿命(ALE)及ALE/LE比值的影响。方法纳入的样本来自"北京老龄化多维纵向研究"课题,对象为宣武区(城区)、大兴区(近郊平原)、怀柔区(远郊山区)≥60岁老年人群。于2009年采用简易精神状态量表对2111人行认知功能的评估。2011年对该样本进行随访。根据能否独立完成日常生活活动(ADL),评定健康与否。应用多状态寿命表IMaCH软件计算各年龄段认知障碍组与非认知障碍组的LE、ALE和ALE/LE比值。结果基线调查的2111人中认知障碍者有312例。①北京市老年人总体LE和ALE趋势为女性高于男性,城市高于农村。认知障碍组的LE和ALE均明显低于认知正常组。②认知障碍组中,城市低龄组(〈70岁)男性LE和ALE均明显低于同龄段女性。男、女,城、乡均为高龄组(≥80岁)的LE和ALE最低,但与认知正常组比较,城、乡均为女性的LE和ALE下降程度大于男性。③ALE/LE比值总体趋势为男性高于女性,城市高于农村。ALE/LE比值在两组均随年龄的增长而下降,但是认知障碍组的比值下降速度更快,尤其以农村高龄(≥80岁)女性ALE/LE比值最低。结论认知障碍对北京市老年人的LE、ALE、ALE/LE比值均有显著影响,特别是对农村高龄女性影响更显著。  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationship between positive affect and subsequent functional disability in older Mexican Americans with self-reported physician-diagnosed arthritis. METHODS: We conducted a 2-year prospective cohort study using a population-based sample of 1,084 noninstitutionalized Mexican American subjects aged > or =65 years residing in 5 southwestern states. Measures included self-reported diagnoses of various medical conditions, functional ability, body mass index, and ratings of positive and negative affect. RESULTS: For 937 subjects with arthritis who reported no limitations in activities of daily living (ADLs) at baseline, 697 remained ADL independent, 84 became ADL dependent, 41 died, and 115 were lost to followup 2 years later. There was a significant association between high positive affect (score = 12) and reduced risk of ADL disability 2 years later, controlling for baseline sociodemographic variables, medical conditions, and negative affect (odds ratio 0.46, 95% confidence interval 0.22-0.94). There was an interaction effect between positive affect and sex, with positive affect having a larger effect in reducing risk of ADL dependence in men than in women. CONCLUSION: High positive affect was associated with lower incidence of ADL disability in older Mexican Americans with self-reported physician-diagnosed arthritis. The strength of the positive affect is stronger in men than in women.  相似文献   

19.
Determining the groups that are most susceptible to developing disability is essential to establishing effective prevention and rehabilitation strategies. The aim of the present study was to determine gender differences in the incidence of disability regarding activities of daily living (ADL) and determinants among elderly residents of Sao Paulo, Brazil. In 2000, 1634 elderly with no difficulties regarding ADL (modified Katz Index) were selected. These activities were reassessed in 2006 and disability was the outcome for the analysis of determinants. The following characteristics were analyzed at baseline: socio-demographic, behavioral, health status, medications, falls, hospitalizations, depressive symptoms, cognition, handgrip, mobility and balance. The incidence density was 42.4/1000 women/year and 17.5/1000 men/year. After adjusting for socioeconomic status and health conditions, women with chronic diseases and social vulnerability continued to have a greater incidence of disability. The following were determinants of the incidence of disability: age and depressive symptoms in both genders; stroke and slowness on the sit-and-stand test among men; and osteoarthritis and sedentary lifestyle among women. Better cognitive performance and handgrip strength were protective factors among men and women, respectively. Adverse clinical and social conditions determine differences between genders regarding the incidence of disability. Decreased mobility and balance and health conditions that affect the central nervous system or lead to impaired cognition disable men more, whereas a sedentary lifestyle, reduction in muscle strength and conditions that affect the osteoarticular system disable women more.  相似文献   

20.
The present paper explores predictors of all-cause mortality based on a longitudinal multidisciplinary study of 422 community residents (197 men, 225 women) aged 69-71 years at baseline examination. The 422 subjects were followed up for 10 years (1976-1986), during which time 102 (59 men, 43 women) died. The Cox proportional hazards model was used to examine the effects of baseline variables on a time-dependent 10-year mortality. Body mass showed a U-shaped relationship to mortality in both sexes. Ex-drinking, current-smoking, history of stroke, history of diabetes mellitus, low ADL and ST and/or T changes in ECG had significant and direct effects on mortality in both sexes or either sex. Whereas, level of education, current-drinking, grip strength, visual retention, and serum albumin revealed significantly inverse relationships to mortality.  相似文献   

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