Abstract

Use latent class analysis (LCA) to identify patterns of multidimensional dependency in a sample of older adults and assess sociodemographic, predictors of class membership. Longitudinal data were used from the Mexican Health and Aging Study (MHAS). 7,920 older adults, 55% women, were recruited. LCA were used to identify meaningful subgroups. LCA was conducted using MPlus version. The final class model was chosen based on the comparison of multiple fit statistics and theoretical parsimony, with models of increasing complexity analyzed sequentially until the best fitting model was identified. Covariates were incorporated to explore the association between these variables and class membership. Three classes groups based on the nine indicators were identified: "Active older adults" was comprised of 64% of the sample participants, "Relatively independent" and "Physically impaired" were comprised of 26% and 10% of the sample. The "Active older adults" profile comprised the majority of respondents who exhibited high endorsement rates across all criteria. The profiles of the "Active older adults" and "Relatively independent" were comparatively more uniform. Finally, respondents belonging to the "Physically impaired" profile, the smallest subgroup, encompassed the individuals most susceptible to a poor dependency profile. These findings highlighted the usefulness to adopt a person-centered approach rather than a variable-centered approach, suggesting directions for future research and tailored interventions approaches to older adults with particular characteristics. Based on patterns of multidimensional dependency, this study identified a typology of dependency using data from a large, nationally representative survey.

Highlights

  • The population is growing older and has major socioeconomic consequence of increasing importance, and pose major challenges for the health care system and other areas of social policy

  • This study examines the multidimensional dependency profile using a longitudinal panel in a Mexican older adult

  • We identified the characteristics of elderly people by exploring their multidimensional dependency profiles and the sociodemographic characteristics of these profiles

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Summary

Introduction

The population is growing older and has major socioeconomic consequence of increasing importance, and pose major challenges for the health care system and other areas of social policy. In Mexico, the proportion of persons over the age of 60 has increased steadily in recent decades. The average age of the Mexican population will increase from 27 to 30 years in this decade, and later, between 2030 and 2050, it will go from 38 to 45. The population 65 and over will increase from 4.8 million to 17 million between 2000 and 2030, reaching about 32.5 million in the year 2050. This means that while today one out of every 20 Mexicans is an older adult, in 2030, one out of every eight will be and in 2050, one out of every four[7,8]

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