This study found that participation in the community salon contributed to the prevention of incident functional disability, even after the application of PSM and IV analysis.
Author: Hiroyuki Hikichi, Naoki Kondo, Katsunori Kondo, Jun Aida, Tokunori Takeda, Ichiro Kawachi
Publication Date: April 17, 2015
Description:
Background: The efficacy of promoting social interactions to improve the health of older adults is not fully established due to residual confounding and selection bias.
Methods: The government of Taketoyo town, Aichi Prefecture, Japan, developed a resident-centred community intervention programme called ‘community salons’, providing opportunities for social interactions among local older residents. To evaluate the impact of the programme, we conducted questionnaire surveys for all older residents of Taketoyo. We carried out a baseline survey in July 2006 (prior to the introduction of the programme) and assessed the onset of functional disability during March 2012. We analysed the data of 2421 older people. In addition to the standard Cox proportional hazard regression, we conducted Cox regression with propensity score matching (PSM) and an instrumental variable (IV) analysis, using the number of community salons within a radius of 350 m from the participant’s home as an instrument.
Results: In the 5 years after the first salon was launched, the salon participants showed a 6.3% lower incidence of functional disability compared with non-participants. Even adjusting for sex, age, equivalent income, educational attainment, higher level activities of daily living and depression, the Cox adjusted HR for becoming disabled was 0.49 (95% CI 0.33 to 0.72). Similar results were observed using PSM (HR 0.52, 95% CI 0.33 to 0.83) and IV-Cox analysis (HR 0.50, 95% CI 0.34 to 0.74).
Conclusions: A community health promotion programme focusedonincreasingsocial interactions among older adults may be effective in preventing the onset of disability
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Keywords: community intervention, social interaction, functional disability, Japan, older adults
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