Let's Ask Them: A National Survey of Definitions of Quality of Life and Its Enhancement among People Aged 65 and Over

Ann Bowling(University College London), Zahava Gabriel(University College London), Joanna Dykes(University College London), Lee Marriott Dowding(University College London), Olga Evans(Office for National Statistics), Anne Fleissig(University College London), David Banister(University College London), Stephen Sutton(University of Cambridge)
The International Journal of Aging and Human Development
June 1, 2003
Cited by 359Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

This study aimed to explore older peoples' definitions of, and priorities for, a good quality of life for themselves and their peers. Nine hundred and ninety-nine people aged 65 and over, living at home in Britain, were interviewed for the study. Good social relationships were the most commonly mentioned constituent that gave respondents' lives quality (mentioned by 81 percent). Other important factors were social roles and activities, health, psychological outlook and well-being, home and neighborhood, finances, and independence. Poor health was most often mentioned as taking quality away from life (by 50 percent). Social relationships and health were judged to be the most important areas. Having health and enough money were the two most frequently mentioned things that would improve the quality of their own lives and those of their peers (though in different order of magnitude). The need for dynamic, multidimensional, and integrated models of quality of life in older age is suggested by these results.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis