Social Supports as Enabling Factors in Nursing Home Admissions: Rural, Suburban, and Urban Differences
| Year of Publication |
2016
|
|---|---|
| Author | |
| Journal |
Journal of Applied Gerontology
|
| Volume |
35
|
| Start Page |
721
|
| Issue |
7
|
| Number of Pages |
721-743
|
| Abstract |
This study investigates differences in social support and nursing home admission by rurality of residence. We use discrete-time event history models with longitudinal data from seven waves (1998-2010) of the Health and Retirement Study to prospectively examine the risk of spending 30 or more days in a nursing home (n = 5,913). Results show that elders with a health problem who live in rural areas of the South or Midwest have approximately 2 times higher odds of nursing home entry than elders living in urban areas in the Northeast. Rural elders report somewhat higher social support than non-rural elders, and controlling for these forms of social support does not explain the higher risk of a nursing home stay for Southerners and Midwesterners living in rural areas. Results suggest that social support has a similar association with nursing home entry for rural, suburban, and urban elders. |
| URL |
http://jag.sagepub.com/content/early/2015/01/09/0733464814566677.abstract
|
| DOI |
10.1177/0733464814566677
|
| Download citation |