000 02954na a2200313 4500
999 _c10270
_d10270
003 PC10270
005 20210625062810.0
008 130622s2013 xxx||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _cH12O
041 _aeng
100 _aBenito León, Julián
_9892
_eNeurología
100 _aBermejo Pareja, Félix
_9582
_eNeurología
100 _aFernández Ruiz, Mario
_9263
_eMedicina Interna
100 _aGuerra Vales, Juan Manuel
_9409
_eMedicina Interna
100 _aTrincado Soriano, Rocío
_9715
_eInstituto de Investigación i+12
100 _aVillarejo Galende, Alberto
_9423
_eNeurología
245 0 4 _aThe Ability of Self-Rated Health to Predict Mortality among Community-Dwelling Elderly Individuals Differs according to the Specific Cause of Death: Data from the NEDICES Cohort.
_h[artículo]
260 _bGerontology,
_c2013
300 _a59(4):368-77.
500 _aFormato Vancouver: Fernández-Ruiz M, Guerra-Vales JM, Trincado R, Fernández R, Medrano MJ, Villarejo A et al. The ability of self-rated health to predict mortality among community-dwelling elderly individuals differs according to the specific cause of death: data from the NEDICES cohort. Gerontology. 2013;59(4):368-77.
501 _aPMID:23615509
504 _aContiene 45 referencias
520 _aBackground: The biomedical and psychosocial mechanisms underlying the relationship between self-rated health (SRH) and mortality in elderly individuals remain unclear. Objective: To assess the association between different measurements of subjective health (global, age-comparative, and time-comparative SRH) and cause-specific mortality. Methods: Neurological Disorders in Central Spain (NEDICES) is a prospective population-based survey of the prevalence and incidence of major age-associated conditions. Data on demographic and health-related variables were collected from 5,278 subjects (≥65 years) in the baseline questionnaire. Thirteen-year mortality and cause of death were obtained from the National Death Registry. Adjusted hazard ratios (aHR) for SRH and all-cause and cause-specific mortality were estimated by Cox proportional hazard models. Results: At baseline, 4,958 participants (93.9%) answered the SRH questionnaire. At the end of follow-up, 2,468 (49.8%) participants had died, of whom 723 (29.2%) died from cardiovascular diseases, 609 (24.7%) from cancer, and 359 (14.5%) from respiratory diseases. Global SRH independently predicted all-cause mortality (aHR for 'poor or very poor' vs. 'very good' category: 1.39; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.15-1.69). Analysis of cause-specific mortality revealed that global SRH was an independent predictor for death due to respiratory diseases (aHR for 'poor or very poor' vs. 'very good' category: 2.61; 95% CI: 1.55-4.39), whereas age-comparative SRH exhibited a gradient effect on the risk of death due to stroke. Time-comparative SRH provided small additional predictive value. Conclusions: The predictive ability of SRH for mortality largely differs according to the specific cause of death, with the strongest associations found for respiratory disease and stroke mortality.
710 _9267
_aServicio de Neurología-Neurofisiología
710 _9625
_aInstituto de Investigación imas12
710 _96
_aServicio de Medicina Interna
856 _uhttp://pc-h12o-es.m-hdoct.a17.csinet.es/pdf/pc/1/pc10270.pdf
_ySolicitar documento
942 _n0
_2ddc
_cART