Résumé
Generally, health does not improve with age, and many physical and physiological functions are known to decline. These changes do not occur uniformly, however; for many reasons, some people experience significant improvement in their health over non-trivial time intervals. Earlier, we showed that 5-year transitions in health status in elderly people (age 65+ years) can be modeled as a stochastic process, using a modified Poisson distribution with four readily interpretable parameters. The original description was based on follow-up of a single cross-sectional study, thus mixing age and cohort effects. Here, we again used a multistate Markov chain to model 5-year deficit accumulation in relation to frailty in both a Swedish birth cohort (aged 70 years at inception) and, from the original cross-sectional study, a Canadian birth cohort, aged 69-71. In both datasets, we found again that a modified Poisson describes the transition in health status with high precision. The parameters of the model though different, are close to each other, even though the cohorts are from different countries, were assembled 20 years apart, and counted different deficits. The model suggests that all health transitions, including health improvement, worsening, and death, can be summarized in a unified stochastic model with a few interpretable parameters.
Langue d'origine | English |
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Pages (de-à) | 241-246 |
Nombre de pages | 6 |
Journal | Experimental Gerontology |
Volume | 42 |
Numéro de publication | 3 |
DOI | |
Statut de publication | Published - mars 2007 |
Note bibliographique
Funding Information:These analyses were supported by the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR) operating Grants MOP62823 and MOP64169, and by the Dalhousie Medical Research Foundation (DMRF). K.R. is supported by the CIHR through an investigator award and by the DMRF as Kathryn Allen Weldon Professor of Alzheimer Research. The H70 data were collected as a pat of the Gerontological and Geriatric Population Studies (H70) in Göteborg, Sweden (Project leader from 1988, Professor Bertil Steen) supported by the Swedish Research Council 11267, and the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research (No. 2835). Each co-author asserts no proprietary interest in the result and no financial conflict of interest.
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Biochemistry
- Ageing
- Molecular Biology
- Genetics
- Endocrinology
- Cell Biology