Relationship Status and Long-Term Care Facility Use in Later Life

TitleRelationship Status and Long-Term Care Facility Use in Later Life
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsThomeer, MBeth, Mudrazija, S, Angel, JL
JournalThe Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences
Volume71
Issue4
Start Page711
Pagination711-723
KeywordsDemographics, Healthcare, Women and Minorities
Abstract

Objectives: Most older adults prefer to age in place and avoid formal long-term care. Yet demographic shifts, including population aging and an increasing prevalence of remarried and unmarried older adults, could undermine these goals, making it important to consider carefully how and why relationship status relates to long-term care risk.Method: We fit hazard models to a sample of adults aged 65 and older from eight waves (1998 2012) of the Health and Retirement Study (N = 21,564). We consider risk of any long-term care facility admission, as well as risk of long-duration stays.Results: Widowed, divorced, and never married adults have the highest risks of long-term care admission. Remarried and partnered adults have similar risks of long-term care admission as continuously married adults. Relationship status is more important for men than for women, especially when considering long-duration stays. Relationship status is also more significant for non-Hispanic White and Hispanic adults compared with non-Hispanic Black adults. Economic resources and, to some extent, social ties partially explain the association between relationship status and long-term care use.Discussion: By addressing the prohibitive costs of long-term care services which enable aging in place (e.g., home health care), relationship status disparities in long-term care may be reduced. Future studies should consider the link between long-term care facility use and relationship status in future cohorts as well as examine how relationship status structures access to a range of long-term care options.

URLhttp://psychsocgerontology.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/11/16/geronb.gbv106.abstract
DOI10.1093/geronb/gbv106
Endnote Keywords

Family sociology/Gender/Health services use/Longitudinal methods/Long-term care/Minority aging/RACE AND ETHNICITY/Hispanic

Endnote ID

999999

Citation Key6457