BMC Geriatrics (Aug 2023)

Gender-specific association of loneliness and health care use in community-dwelling older adults

  • Friederike Hildegard Boehlen,
  • Dirk Heider,
  • Dieter Schellberg,
  • Johanna Katharina Hohls,
  • Ben Schöttker,
  • Hermann Brenner,
  • Hans-Christoph Friederich,
  • Hans-Helmut König,
  • Beate Wild

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-023-04201-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background Loneliness in older adults is common, particularly in women. In this article, gender differences in the association of loneliness and health care use are investigated in a large sample of community-dwelling older adults. Methods Data of 2525 persons (ages 55–85 years)—participants of the fourth follow- up (2011–2014) of the ESTHER study- were analyzed. Loneliness and health care use were assessed by study doctors in the course of a home visit. Gender-specific regression models with Gamma-distribution were performed using loneliness as independent variable to predict outpatient health care use, adjusted for demographic variables. Results In older women, lonely persons were shown to have significantly more visits to general practitioners and mental health care providers in a three-month period compared to less lonely persons (p = .005). The survey found that outpatient health care use was positively associated with loneliness, multimorbidity, and mental illness in older women but not in older men. Older men had significantly more contact with inpatient care in comparison to women (p = .02). Conclusions It is important to consider gender when analyzing inpatient and outpatient health care use in older persons. In older women loneliness is associated with increased use of outpatient services.

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