Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1904006 | Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics | 2009 | 5 Pages |
SummarySPH is a subjective and objective assessment of personal health. It is important in evaluation of health status in the elderly as it has capacity to predict mortality, functional declining, and health-care demands. A lot of research has been published about SPH in the elderly, but little is known about SPH in the very old, especially in comparison with the “younger-old” (YO) population. The study has aimed to investigate SPH in 240 elderly patients and compare the data between the “oldest-old” (OO) (aged > 90 years; n = 52) and the YO (aged 60–74 years; n = 188) subjects. Results have shown that the OO group of patients had better SPH than their YO counterparts. Our findings implicate that very old persons belong to a special sub-group of elderly, the “successfully aged”, probably due to their genetic stability, distinctive lifestyle, or both.