Influences on
Quality of Life in Early Old Age
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Background
A growing proportion of the lives of a growing number
of people will be spent as healthy and, in some cases, relatively
affluent retirees. Recent social and demographic changes make
this development inevitable. Labour market exit, whether through
early retirement or long term unemployment, is occurring at earlier
ages; at the same time, adequate occupational pensions are becoming
more widespread and healthy life expectancy at age 65 years is
increasing. The opportunities, costs and benefits of this phase
of life are of considerable importance to both citizens and state.
Our research will contribute to an understanding of these social
changes by examining their impact on the quality of life of a
representative sample of British people in early old age.
Aims and Objectives
The main aim of the study is to provide basic science
information which is relevant to the policy of extending quality
of life (QoL) and to pursue this aim by integrating contributions
from different academic disciplines; in particular, social gerontology's
ideas of structured dependency and the Third Age, social epidemiology's
interest in contextual and life course influences on circumstances
in later life and new statistical methods for analysing life course
data.
The objectives of the study are:
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To develop a measure of QoL in early old
age which goes beyond health-related QoL to the potentially
enriching idea of the Third Age.
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To establish whether there are inequalities
in this wider QoL in early old age; and to estimate the size
of any such inequalities by socio-economic position and gender. |
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To identify the main contextual
(current) and life course influences on this wider QoL; and
to investigate variation in these influences by socio-economic
position and gender. |
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To contribute to the theoretical
debate about the changing nature of retirement and old age.
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To make maximum use of a unique data
set which has been assembled through previous ESRC funding;
and to enhance this data set through the addition of new information.
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Study Design
Much information has already been collected about
the nearly 300 people, mostly aged 65-75 years, who will be the
subjects of our study. They were studied as children in 1937-39
when information about their diet, health and social circumstances
was collected. They were traced recently to their present locations
and, as part of a previous ESRC-funded study, interviewed in 1997-98.
Full family, household, residential and occupational histories
were taken, covering the whole of their lives, and details of
their present health and social circumstances were collected.
Our new study will collect additional information
by postal questionnaire, backed up by telephone interviews with
non-responders, about the subjects' QoL. The aspects of interest
will include the extent to which this phase of life is experienced
as positive and self-enhancing; and the factors which may influence
this perception, such as involvement with community and family,
access to services and domestic assistance. This information will
allow us to estimate the social distribution of good QoL in early
old age and to identify its predictors in terms of present life
circumstances and pathways from childhood through life.
Policy Implications
The results of the research will be relevant to
policies ranging widely from national issues, such as pensions
and housing, to personal decisions like the balance of benefit
associated with 'retiring to the south coast', where the dream
of contentment comes at the price of disrupting life-long social
networks.
Plausibly, each case is influenced by the present
and the past, but little is known about their relative importance
in later life. And without that information it is difficult to
know whether policies should be directed at early old age or whether
earlier interventions are required.