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Published in: BMC Geriatrics 1/2023

Open Access 01-12-2023 | Dementia | Research

Change in functional disability and its trends among older adults in Korea over 2008–2020: a 4-year follow-up cohort study

Authors: Van Cuong Nguyen, Gwi-Ryung Son Hong

Published in: BMC Geriatrics | Issue 1/2023

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Abstract

Background

The prevalence of functional disabilities, including difficulties in performing activities of daily living (ADLs) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs), increased significantly in recent years and burdened the healthcare system.

Methods

We analysed data from Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging (KLOSA) surveys, including participants aged 65 or older at baseline (2008), and participated in all 4-year follow-up periods in 2012, 2016, and 2020. A 4-year follow-up cohort study was applied to specify the change in functional disability and its trend over time among older adults. The generalized estimation equation (GEE) model was used to verify the uptrend of functional disability. Logistic regression analyses were applied to examine the influence of demographic and health parameters on the change in functional disability.

Results

The prevalence of ADL disability was 2.24% at baseline, increased to 3.10% after four years, 6.42% after eight years, and reached 11.12% after 12 years, five times higher than that at baseline. For IADL disability, they were 10.67%, 10.61%, 18.18%, and 25.57%, respectively. The uptrend of ADL disability in persons aged 65–74 (1.77% at baseline, increased to 7.65% in 2020, 12-year change of 5.88%) was slower than in those aged 75 or older (4.22% at baseline, increased to 25.90% in 2020, 12-year change of 21.68%). IADL disability were consistent with this. The high ADL/IADL disability rate was also present among persons with poor health status, physical inactivity, depression, dementia, and multiple chronic diseases. The relative risk of ADL/IADL disability in persons with a history of functional disability was significantly higher than in those without historical disabilities.

Conclusion

The study verified the change in functional disability and its upward trend over time by older adults’ demographic and health parameters. Functional disability was relatively flat tending to increase slowly during the early years but increased rapidly in the following years. Factors that strongly influenced the change in prevalence and the uptrend of functional disability were advanced age, living alone, being underweight or obese, poor health status, physical inactivity, depression, dementia, having multiple chronic diseases, and especially having a historical disability.
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Metadata
Title
Change in functional disability and its trends among older adults in Korea over 2008–2020: a 4-year follow-up cohort study
Authors
Van Cuong Nguyen
Gwi-Ryung Son Hong
Publication date
01-12-2023
Publisher
BioMed Central
Keywords
Dementia
Dementia
Published in
BMC Geriatrics / Issue 1/2023
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2318
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-023-03867-5

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