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...
The growing number of elderly persons in U.S. society—the “Graying of America”—increases the urgency...
Repeatedly, researchers have reported on the health benefits resulting from social support (Cohen-Ma...
We estimated the relative importance of various client characteristics related to nursing home entry...
Data from the Longitudinal Study of Aging are used to examine the incidence of nursing home admissio...
This presentation was given during the Gerontological Society of America Annual Meeting
Many of the sociodemographic, health status, and social support characteristics that predict the use...
Research on admissions to care homes for older people has paid more attention to individual and soci...
Analyzing the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey, authors from the Maine Rural Health Research Cent...
Nationally representative estimates of the prospective risk of entry into a nursing home and the lik...
The relationship between place of residence and use of formal services prior to entering a nursing h...
Rural elders face unique challenges in maintaining and strengthening their social supports. The purp...
Theme: Optimal Aging Through ResearchSession 1175 (Symposium)This journal suppl. entitled: 2013 GSA ...
The main goal of this study is to examine the relationship among residence ( rural/ nonmetropolitan/...
Objectives. States vary greatly in their support for home- and community-based services (HCBS) that ...
ABSTRACT Contact with family and friends, in the form of visiting, is very important to the quality ...
The growing number of elderly persons in U.S. society—the “Graying of America”—increases the urgency...
Repeatedly, researchers have reported on the health benefits resulting from social support (Cohen-Ma...
We estimated the relative importance of various client characteristics related to nursing home entry...
Data from the Longitudinal Study of Aging are used to examine the incidence of nursing home admissio...
This presentation was given during the Gerontological Society of America Annual Meeting
Many of the sociodemographic, health status, and social support characteristics that predict the use...
Research on admissions to care homes for older people has paid more attention to individual and soci...
Analyzing the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey, authors from the Maine Rural Health Research Cent...
Nationally representative estimates of the prospective risk of entry into a nursing home and the lik...
The relationship between place of residence and use of formal services prior to entering a nursing h...
Rural elders face unique challenges in maintaining and strengthening their social supports. The purp...
Theme: Optimal Aging Through ResearchSession 1175 (Symposium)This journal suppl. entitled: 2013 GSA ...
The main goal of this study is to examine the relationship among residence ( rural/ nonmetropolitan/...
Objectives. States vary greatly in their support for home- and community-based services (HCBS) that ...
ABSTRACT Contact with family and friends, in the form of visiting, is very important to the quality ...
The growing number of elderly persons in U.S. society—the “Graying of America”—increases the urgency...
Repeatedly, researchers have reported on the health benefits resulting from social support (Cohen-Ma...
We estimated the relative importance of various client characteristics related to nursing home entry...