Social inequality in walking speed in early old age in the Whitehall II study.

Archive ouverte

Brunner, Eric | Shipley, Martin | Spencer, Victoria | Kivimaki, Mika | Chandola, Tarani | Gimeno, David | Singh-Manoux, Archana | Guralnik, Jack | Marmot, Michael

Edité par CCSD ; Oxford University Press / The Gerontological Society of America -

International audience. We investigated social inequalities in walking speed in early old age. Walking speed was measured by timed 8-ft (2.44 m) test in 6,345 individuals, with mean age of 61.1 (SD 6.0) years. Current or last known civil service employment grade defined socioeconomic position. Mean walking speed was 1.36 (SD 0.29) m/s in men and 1.21 (SD 0.30) in women. Average age- and ethnicity-adjusted walking speed was approximately 13% higher in the highest employment grade compared with the lowest. Based on the relative index of inequality (RII), the difference in walking speed across the social hierarchy was 0.15 m/s (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.12-0.18) in men and 0.17 m/s (0.12-0.22) in women, corresponding to an age-related difference of 18.7 (13.6-23.8) years in men and 14.9 (9.9-19.9) years in women. The RII for slow walking speed (logistic model for lowest sex-specific quartile vs others) adjusted for age, sex, and ethnicity was 3.40 (2.64-4.36). Explanatory factors for the social gradient in walking speed included Short-Form 36 physical functioning, labor market status, financial insecurity, height, and body mass index. Demographic, psychosocial, behavioral, biologic, and health factors in combination accounted for 40% of social inequality in walking speed. Social inequality in walking speed is substantial in early old age and reflects many factors beyond the direct effects of physical health.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Equalization of four cardiovascular risk algorithms after systematic recalibration: individual-participant meta-analysis of 86 prospective studies

Archive ouverte | Pennells, Lisa | CCSD

International audience

Interleukin-6 and C-reactive protein as predictors of cognitive decline in late midlife.

Archive ouverte | Singh-Manoux, Archana | CCSD

International audience. Peripheral inflammatory markers are elevated in patients with dementia. In order to assess their etiologic role, we examined whether interleukin-6 (IL-6) and C-reactive protein (CRP) measured...

Low conscientiousness and risk of all-cause, cardiovascular and cancer mortality over 17 years: Whitehall II cohort study.

Archive ouverte | Hagger-Johnson, Gareth | CCSD

International audience. To examine the personality trait conscientiousness as a risk factor for mortality and to identify candidate explanatory mechanisms. Participants in the Whitehall II cohort study (N=6800, aged...

Chargement des enrichissements...