Escaping most common lethal diseases in old age: Morbidity profiles of Portuguese centenarians - 30/08/17
Abstract |
Introduction |
Exceptional long-lived individuals, i.e., centenarians, are thought to have survived or escaped diseases that are common causes of death at younger ages. A better understanding of their health profile and health trajectories provides important information for geriatric care provision. This study aims to examine morbidity profiles of a sample of Portuguese centenarians with a particular focus on the characteristics of those who have evaded a list of age-related illnesses.
Materials and methods |
Two hundred and forty-one centenarians (M age=101.16 years; 88% female) from two centenarian studies were considered. They and/or their proxies were asked on their health history and then labeled as “escapers”, “survivors” or “delayers” following Evert et al.’s morbidity typology (2003). Sociodemographic characteristics, physical and mental health status of each group were analyzed.
Results |
Sensorial impairments and incontinence were the most frequent conditions reported. Considering the three most lethal diseases of the elderly population (heart disease, non-skin cancer and stroke), we verified that 70.6% of centenarians escaped these diseases, and 18.2% experienced a delayed onset of such diseases until the age of 80.
Conclusions |
Findings reinforce the great variability of age-related pathologies and overall health status in centenarians, but that a great majority had the ability to evade the most lethal conditions. Management of patients with multimorbidity in very advanced ages has become a major healthcare challenge and our findings provide further evidence for policies and targeted interventions for this population.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Centenarians, Morbidity, Health status, Portugal
Plan
Vol 8 - N° 4
P. 310-314 - septembre 2017 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.
Déjà abonné à cette revue ?