16 results on '"Bowling, Ann"'
Search Results
2. Predictors of patterns of change in health-related quality of life in older women over 7 years: evidence from a prospective cohort study.
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Dale, Caroline E., Bowling, Ann, Adamson, Joy, Kuper, Hannah, Amuzu, Antoinette, Ebrahim, Shah, Casas, Juan P., and Nüesch, Eveline
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BEHAVIOR modification , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *HEALTH behavior , *INTERVIEWING , *LONGITUDINAL method , *OBESITY , *PROBABILITY theory , *QUALITY of life , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *COMORBIDITY , *DATA analysis , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *PHYSICAL activity , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *OLD age - Abstract
Background: the evaluation of the determinants of change over time in health-related quality of life (HR-QoL) in older people is limited. This study aims to identify patterns of change in HR-QoL over 7 years and their determinants using data from the British Women's Heart and Health Study, a representative sample of older women (n = 4286).Methods: longitudinal latent class analysis was used to identify subpopulations of women with similar HR-QoL trajectories from 1999–2000 to 2007. HR-QoL was measured using the EQ-5D. Multivariate multinomial logistic regression was used to model the association of identified trajectories with baseline predictors after multiple imputation of missing data.Results: four distinct EQ-5D trajectories were suggested: high (19% of women), high decline (22%), intermediate (42%) and low decline (16%). Prevalent arthritis (OR = 13.4; 95% CI: 8.8, 20.5), diabetes (OR = 4.6; 95% CI: 1.5, 14.2) and obesity (OR = 3.9; 95% CI: 2.5, 6.0) were the strongest predicting health conditions of adverse changes in HR-QoL and physical activity the strongest predicting lifestyle factor (OR = 2.8; 95% CI: 2.0, 3.9).Conclusions: findings suggest that older women without obesity or pre-existing health conditions who undertake more physical activity are more likely to experience high HR-QoL, reinforcing the importance of these factors for healthy ageing. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2013
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3. Do older and younger people differ in their reported well-being? A national survey of adults in Britain.
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Bowling, Ann
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WELL-being , *HEALTH surveys , *ADULTS , *SENSORY perception , *SELF-evaluation , *INTERVIEWING - Abstract
Aim. To document population perceptions of well-being and predictors of self-assessed well-being.Methods. National face-to-face interview survey of adults aged ≥16 years, conducted by the Office for National Statistics for their Omnibus Survey in Britain (response 58%; 1049 of 1823 eligible).Results. People aged 65+ years were more likely than younger people to define well-being as being able to continue to do the things they had always done. Most men and women, in all age groups, rated their well-being and mental well-being positively. Self-rated health, mental health symptoms, long-standing illness and social support were the main drivers of overall well-being in all age groups. Mental health symptoms, long-standing illness and social support were the main drivers of mental well-being. For example, in reduced multivariable models, those who reported no long-standing illness had almost twice the odds of others, of good, rather than not good, overall well-being, and over three times the odds of good, rather than not good, mental well-being. The odds of good versus not good overall well-being were also multiplied by 1.002 for each additional available person for comfort and support and similarly by 1.073 in relation to mental well-being.Conclusions. Understanding the drivers of well-being among adults, including older adults, is of high policy importance. Attention should be focused on improvements in population health and functioning and on encouraging younger and older people to develop and maintain social support networks and engagement in social activities. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2011
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4. Fear of dying in an ethnically diverse society: cross-sectional studies of people aged 65+ in Britain.
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Bowling, Ann, Iliffe, Steve, Kessel, Anthony, and Higginson, Irene J.
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DEATH , *FEAR , *ETHNIC groups , *QUALITY of life , *OLDER people , *FAMILIES , *SURVEYS - Abstract
Aim To examine fears about dying in an ethnically diverse population sample, and a more homogeneous population sample, aged 65 and over. Methods Personal interviews with people aged 65+ living at home responding to two Office for National Statistics Omnibus Surveys in Britain, and two Ethnibus Surveys of ethnically diverse populations in Britain. Results Ethnically diverse respondents were more likely than British population respondents to express fears about dying on all measures used. Respondents in both samples with better, compared with worse, quality of life had significantly reduced odds of having extreme fears of dying (ethnically diverse sample, OR 0.924 (95% CI 0.898 to 0.951); British population sample, OR 0.981 (95% CI 0.966 to 0.996); both p<0.001). In the latter sample only, older age was protective (OR 0.957; 95% CI 0.930 to 0.985; p<0.001), whereas in the Ethnibus sample, having a longstanding illness (OR 2.024; 95% CI 1.158 to 3.535; p<0.05) and having more relatives to help them (OR 1.134; 95% CI 1.010 to 1.274; p<0.05) increased fears about dying. Conclusions Enabling older people to express fears about dying is likely to be important when planning supportive end-of-life care. Practitioners should not assume that fears about dying are the same in different social groups, or that extensive family support is protective against such anxiety. Older people from ethnic minorities had more anxieties about dying than others, and were more likely to express fears the more extensive their family support. These findings have implications for commissioners and practitioners of primary and secondary care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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5. Perceptions of active ageing in Britain: divergences between minority ethnic and whole population samples.
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BOWLING, ANN
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AGING , *ETHNIC groups , *ETHNICITY , *QUALITY of life - Abstract
Objective: to identify perceptions of, and associations with, active ageing among ethnically diverse and homogeneous samples of older people in Britain. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2009
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6. Predictors of mortality among a national sample of elderly widowed people: analysis of 28-year mortality rates.
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BOWLING, ANN
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WIDOWS , *MORTALITY , *BEREAVEMENT , *GRIEF , *OLD age - Abstract
Objective: to identify predictors of mortality among a national sample of elderly widowed people 28 years post-baseline interview. Design and setting: face to face home interview survey across England. Measures: physical, psychological, social, and socio-economic status and circumstances. Results: excess risk of mortality, which had been noted up to six months post bereavement among males aged 75+, had disappeared. In contrast to findings up to 13 years post-bereavement, neither psycho-social factors, social circumstances nor social class independently predicted differentials in mortality when analysed up to 28 years post-bereavement. The most significant, independent predictors, up to the 28-year term, were, as would be expected, male sex, older age, poorer physical functioning, and expressed 'relief at the death of the spouse'. When the sample was split by duration of widow(er)hood male sex and older age retained significance. Conclusion: the increasing frailty of the sample overall, and reduced statistical power in split-sample analyses, may explain the loss of significance of physical functioning and 'expressed relief at the death' in the split-sample results. The psycho-social risk factors for mortality after bereavement reduce over time, although further examination of expressed relief would be worthwhile. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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7. Differentials in mortality up to 20 years after baseline interview among older people in East London and Essex.
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Bowling, Ann and Grundy, Emily
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MORTALITY , *AGING , *SOCIAL participation , *DISEASES in older people , *GERIATRICS , *HEALTH of older people - Abstract
Objective: to identify socio-psychological predictors of mortality during a 20-year follow-up period among people aged 65 to <85 and 85+ at baseline interview. Study design and setting: elderly people living at home in East London and mid-Essex, who responded to surveys of successful survival in older age in the late 1980s; their mortality was traced through the National Health Central Registry. Results: adjusted analyses show that, as expected, the hazard rate for mortality over a 20-year follow-up was reduced for younger respondents and increased for less functionally able respondents. The hazard ratio for males was almost one and a half times that of females. The hazard rate was also reduced with each categorical increase in life satisfaction and was consistently reduced for those who undertook crafts, social visiting and activities regularly. There was some variation by age and sex. Conclusion: the results show that social participation is associated with lower risks of death, particularly among people aged 65 to <85, and that life satisfaction is also protective, particularly among females and people aged 85+, even when health status and socio-demographic circumstances are controlled. The study thus provides support for the hypothesised influence of social participation and subjective well-being on survival in older age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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8. Quality of life among older people with poor functioning. The influence of perceived control over life.
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Bowling, Ann, Seetai, Sharon, Morris, Richard, and Ebrahim, Shah
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MOBILITY of older people , *QUALITY of life , *DISEASES in older people , *HEALTH of older people , *SURVEYS - Abstract
Objective: to investigate the apparently incongruous coupling of poor physical functioning with high QoL. Study design and setting: face-to-face interview survey of random sample of 999 people aged 65+ across Britain. Results: twenty-one per cent of respondents reported fairly to very severe levels of functional difficulty, and 62% of these rated their QoL as 'good'. Better self-rated health, lower burden of chronic disease, not having fallen, higher social engagement and higher levels of perceived control over life, distinguished between people who had difficulties with physical functioning and who perceived their QoL to be 'good', rather than 'not good'. The open-ended survey responses broadly supported the quantitative findings. Conclusion: people with difficulties with physical functioning, who perceived their QoL to be 'not good', as opposed to 'good', were adversely affected by a higher burden of disease and having fewer socio-psychological resources to help them to cope effectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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9. Which model of successful ageing should be used? Baseline findings from a British longitudinal survey of ageing.
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Bowling, Ann and Iliffe, Steve
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DEMOGRAPHIC surveys , *AGING , *HEALTH of older people , *QUALITY of life - Abstract
Background: there is increasing interest in how to age 'successfully' and in reaching consensus over its definition. Objective: to assess different models of successful ageing, using a British longitudinal survey of ageing in 2000-1. Setting: community, settings in Britain. Methods: five models of successful ageing were tested on a British cross-sectional population survey of 999 people aged 65+. The models were biomedical, broader biomedical, social, psychological and lay based. Results: the lay model emerged as the strongest. Respondents who were classified as successfully aged with this model, compared with those not successfully aged, had over five times the odds of rating their quality of life (QoL) as good rather than not good [odds ratio (OR) = 5.493, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) - 2.655-11.364]. Conclusion: the lay-based, more multidimensional, model of successful ageing predicted perceived QoL more powerfully than unidimensional models and should be used to evaluate the outcomes of health promotion in older populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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10. Are older people willing to give up their place in the queue for cardiac surgery to a younger person?
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Bowling, Ann, Mariotto, Aldo, and Evans, Olga
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OLDER people , *CARDIAC surgery - Abstract
Presents a study that measured whether older people living in Great Britain would be willing to give up their place on the cardiac surgery waiting list for a younger person. Increase in willingness to cede priority with older age; Methodology; Results and discussion.
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- 2002
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11. Age‐ and sex‐related bias in the management of heart disease in a district general hospital.
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DUDLEY, NIGEL J., BOWLING, ANN, BOND, MATTHEW, McKEE, DOROTHY, SCOTT, MARIE McCLAY, BANNING, ADRIAN, ELDER, ANDREW T., MARTIN, A. TONY, and BLACKMAN, IVA
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HEART diseases , *THERAPEUTICS , *CARDIAC patients , *HOSPITALS , *HUMAN sexuality , *HEALTH equity , *SEX discrimination in medicine - Abstract
Objective: to investigate the clinical management of heart disease and determine whether there was age‐ and sex‐related bias in the use of investigations and interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2002
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12. Activities of daily living: Changes in functional ability in three samples of elderly and very...
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Bowling, Ann and Grundy, Emily
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GERIATRIC assessment - Abstract
Investigates changes in functional ability and associations with these changes in relation to physical health, psychiatric morbidity, life satisfaction, service use and social circumstance among elderlies. Relationship of physical functioning and use of rehabilitative and medical services; Importance of maintaining levels of functioning in old age.
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- 1997
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13. Commentary: Trends in activity limitation.
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Bowling, Ann
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LIFE expectancy , *LONGEVITY , *AGING , *DISEASES , *CROSS-sectional method , *LONGITUDINAL method , *META-analysis - Published
- 2011
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14. Incident disability in older adults: prediction models based on two British prospective cohort studies.
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Nüesch, Eveline, Pablo, Perel, Dale, Caroline E., Prieto-Merino, David, Kumari, Meena, Bowling, Ann, Ebrahim, Shah, and Casas, Juan P.
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Objective: to develop and validate a prediction model for incident locomotor disability after 7 years in older adults.Setting: prospective British cohort studies: British Women's Heart and Health Study (BWHHS) for development and the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) for validation.Subjects: community-dwelling older adults.Methods: multivariable logistic regression models after selection of predictors with backward elimination. Model performance was assessed using metrics of discrimination and calibration. Models were internally and externally validated.Results: locomotor disability was reported in BWHHS by 861 of 1,786 (48%) women after 7 years. Age, a history of arthritis and low physical activity levels were the most important predictors of locomotor disability. Models using routine measures as predictors had satisfactory calibration and discrimination (c-index 0.73). Addition of 31 blood markers did not increase the predictive performance. External validation in ELSA showed reduced discrimination (c-index 0.65) and an underestimation of disability risks. A web-based calculator for locomotor disability is available (http://www.sealedenvelope.com/trials/bwhhsmodel/).Conclusions: we developed and externally validated a prediction model for incident locomotor disability in older adults based on routine measures available to general practitioners, patients and public health workers, and showed an adequate discrimination. Addition of blood markers from major biological pathways did not improve the performance of the model. Further replication in additional data sets may lead to further enhancement of the current model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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15. Incident disability in older adults: prediction models based on two British prospective cohort studies.
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Nüesch, Eveline, Pablo, Perel, Dale, Caroline E., Prieto-Merino, David, Kumari, Meena, Bowling, Ann, Ebrahim, Shah, and Casas, Juan P.
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MOVEMENT disorders , *PEOPLE with disabilities , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *HUMAN locomotion , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH funding , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *INDEPENDENT living , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio , *OLD age , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Objective: to develop and validate a prediction model for incident locomotor disability after 7 years in older adults.Setting: prospective British cohort studies: British Women's Heart and Health Study (BWHHS) for development and the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) for validation.Subjects: community-dwelling older adults.Methods: multivariable logistic regression models after selection of predictors with backward elimination. Model performance was assessed using metrics of discrimination and calibration. Models were internally and externally validated.Results: locomotor disability was reported in BWHHS by 861 of 1,786 (48%) women after 7 years. Age, a history of arthritis and low physical activity levels were the most important predictors of locomotor disability. Models using routine measures as predictors had satisfactory calibration and discrimination (c-index 0.73). Addition of 31 blood markers did not increase the predictive performance. External validation in ELSA showed reduced discrimination (c-index 0.65) and an underestimation of disability risks. A web-based calculator for locomotor disability is available (http://www.sealedenvelope.com/trials/bwhhsmodel/).Conclusions: we developed and externally validated a prediction model for incident locomotor disability in older adults based on routine measures available to general practitioners, patients and public health workers, and showed an adequate discrimination. Addition of blood markers from major biological pathways did not improve the performance of the model. Further replication in additional data sets may lead to further enhancement of the current model. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2015
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16. Social capital, mortality, cardiovascular events and cancer: a systematic review of prospective studies.
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Choi, Minkyoung, Mesa-Frias, Marco, Nuesch, Eveline, Hargreaves, James, Prieto-Merino, David, Bowling, Ann, Snith, G Davey, Ebrahim, Shah, Dale, Caroline, and Casas, Juan P
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Background: Social capital is considered to be an important determinant of life expectancy and cardiovascular health. Evidence on the association between social capital and all-cause mortality, cardiovascular disease (CVD) and cancer was systematically reviewed.Methods: Prospective studies examining the association of social capital with these outcomes were systematically sought in Medline, Embase and PsycInfo, all from inception to 8 October 2012. We categorized the findings from studies according to seven dimensions of social capital, including social participation, social network, civic participation,social support, trust, norm of reciprocity and sense of community, and pooled the estimates across studies to obtain summary relative risks of the health outcomes for each social capital dimension. We excluded studies focusing on children, refugees or immigrants and studies conducted in the former Soviet Union.Results: Fourteen prospective studies were identified. The pooled estimates showed no association between most social capital dimensions and all-cause mortality, CVD or cancer. Limited evidence was found for association of increased mortality with social participation and civic participation when comparing the most extreme risk comparisons.Conclusions: Evidence to support an association between social capital and health outcomes is limited. Lack of consensus on measurements for social capital hinders the comparability of studies and weakens the evidence base. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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