Toward understanding elders' health service utilization
- 1 December 1981
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Community Health
- Vol. 7 (2), 80-92
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01323227
Abstract
Providing appropriate health services to the elderly is emerging as one of the major challenges of this decade. Using the theoretical framework developed by Andersen and Aday, this study attempts to improve our understanding of those factors which inhibit or facilitate elders' use of health services. The data come from a 1974 statewide random probability sample of 1,625 noninstitutionalized elders 65 years of age or older living in Massachusetts. Regression analysis is used to study the effects of predisposing, enabling, and need characteristics on the use of five health services: hospitals, physicians, dentists, home care, and ambulatory care. The model explains from 5% to 27% of the variance in health service utilization. Need characteristics, in general, account for most of the explained variance.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Age and Medical Care Utilization PatternsJournal of Gerontology, 1981
- Awareness and Use of Health Services by the ElderlyMedical Care, 1980
- The Black Elderly and Their Use of Healthcare Services:Journal of Gerontological Social Work, 1979
- Determinants of Three Stages of Delay in Seeking Care at a Medical ClinicMedical Care, 1979
- Access to Medical Care in the U.S.: Realized and PotentialMedical Care, 1978
- Making Sense Out of Utilization DataMedical Care, 1975
- A systems-oriented approach to the consumption of medical commoditiesSocial Science & Medicine (1967), 1973
- Progress in Development of the Index of ADLThe Gerontologist, 1970
- Factors Related to the Use of Health Services: An International Comparative StudyMedical Care, 1969
- A Guttman Health Scale for the AgedJournal of Gerontology, 1966