Publication | Closed Access
Successful ageing: criteria and predictors
37
Citations
0
References
2011
Year
Family MedicineBehavioral SciencesAgingPopulation AgingGeriatricsLongevityMedicineManagementStructural Equation ModelingLater AdulthoodPerceptionActive AgeingSuccessful AgeingPublic HealthEpidemiology Of AgingPositive AgeingPsychology
espanolEn la literatura cientifica anglosajona, envejecimiento con exito es un termino que ha ido consolidandose en los ultimos anos, al mismo tiempo que ha ido adoptando distintas denominaciones: «envejecimiento activo», «productivo», «saludable», «optimo» o «positivo». A pesar de que estos conceptos han sido descritos mediante factores bio-psicosociales, la investigacion empirica los ha reducido a variables funcionales y salud fisica y, aunque los autores consideran que los determinantes de este tipo de envejecimiento son tambien multi-dominio, su busqueda e investigacion ha sido tambien reducida a los estilos de vida. Logicamente, la prevalencia de este tipo de envejecimiento hallada empiricamente es poco consistente y la investigacion de sus determinantes o predictores se refiere a condiciones biomedicas. En este trabajo hemos analizado los resultados de 458 personas (170 varones y 288 mujeres, media de edad: 66,47, rango: 55-75) participantes en el estudio ELEA (Estudio Longitudinal de Envejecimiento Activo). Los resultados ponen de manifiesto (en dependencia de las definiciones operacionales simples o multidimensionales utilizadas) una amplia disparidad en la proporcion de personas que envejecen con exito, asi como un amplio numero de predictores multidominio de envejecimiento con exito, entre los cuales se encuentran variables psicologicas intelectuales, de la personalidad y motivacionales. EnglishSuccessful ageing: Criteria and predictors. The last forty years have seen the consolidation of the successful ageing concept in the Anglophone scientific literature. Nevertheless, several terms have been used as synonymous, including healthy, active, productive, optimal and positive ageing. But although all of these terms have been described through a broad set of biopsycho-social factors, research in this field usually reduces successful ageing to daily life functioning and physical health. Also, despite the fact that authors consider the determinants of successful ageing to be potentially multi-domain, empirical research usually reduces them to lifestyles. Obviously, the prevalence of this kind of ageing found empirically is not very consistent, and research on its determinants or predictors refers to biomedical conditions. In this study, we examined data on 458 participants (170 males and 288 females; mean age 66.47, range: 55-75) from the ELEA (Longitudinal Study on Active Ageing). The results show (depending on the simple or multidimensional definitions used) a very wide range of proportions of successfully ageing older persons, as well as a large number of multi-domain predictors of successful ageing, including psychological characteristics related to intelligence, personality and motivation.