Age Differences in Self-Assessments of Health: Age Changes, Cohort Differences, or Survivorship?

1993 Journal of Gerontology 348 citations

Abstract

Do older people tend to exaggerate their health problems? Or do they downplay them? Do such tendencies change as people age? Are they a function of cohort membership? Or are differences in health perceptions among elderly people due to differences in survivorship within the elderly cohorts? These questions are examined with longitudinal data from the Yale Health and Aging Project, a stratified probability sample of elderly persons in New Haven, Connecticut. Complete health assessments are available for 2,583 community residents 65 and older in 1982, and complete follow-up date are available for 1,319 respondents in 1988. Multivariate regressions of self-assessed health on concurrent 1982 and 1988 objective health status and longitudinal analysis of residual values from these equations show that: (a) older survey respondents gave disproportionately positive health assessments, and (b) processes of aging, selective survivorship, and cohort differences all appear to play a role in creating this pattern.

Keywords

Survivorship curveCohortGerontologyDemographySuccessful agingMedicineCohort studyMultivariate analysisCohort effectPsychologyEnvironmental healthPopulation

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Year
1993
Type
article
Volume
48
Issue
6
Pages
S289-S300
Citations
348
Access
Closed

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Ellen Idler (1993). Age Differences in Self-Assessments of Health: Age Changes, Cohort Differences, or Survivorship?. Journal of Gerontology , 48 (6) , S289-S300. https://doi.org/10.1093/geronj/48.6.s289

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DOI
10.1093/geronj/48.6.s289