Volume 117, Issue 9 , Pages 650-656, 1 November 2004
Educational disadvantage impairs functional recovery after hospitalization in older persons
Purpose
To determine whether low educational level is associated with poor functional recovery after hospitalization in older adults.
Methods
We followed 862 patients (374 with low education, defined as <high school) for 6 months after hospitalization. Poor functional recovery was defined as an Activities of Daily Living score that was lower 6 months after hospitalization than 1 month before hospitalization. People who died were also considered to have poor recovery.
Results
Of the 862 participants, 351 (41%) experienced poor functional recovery: 124 died and 227 had declines in activities of daily living. There was a graded, statistically significant relation between level of education and poor functional recovery, regardless of impairment of activities of daily living at baseline. Poor functional recovery was more common in subjects with baseline impairment (50% [147/296]) than in those without baseline impairment (36% [204/566]). Independent predictors of poor functional recovery were low education, cognitive impairment, lack of social support, poor self-rated health, and high comorbidity. Sequential addition of demographic, economic, functional, psychosocial, and clinical factors to low education only modestly affected the association between low education and poor functional recovery.
Conclusion
Educational disadvantage impairs functional recovery after hospitalization in older persons.
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Dr. Chaudhry is a Special Research Fellow, supported by the Department of Veterans Affairs. This work was supported in part by the Yale Mentorship Program in Patient-Oriented Research on Aging (AG00949), a grant from the National Institute on Aging (AG12551), and the Claude D. Pepper Older Americans Independence Center (AG21342).
PII: S0002-9343(04)00501-7
doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2004.06.026
© 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 117, Issue 9 , Pages 650-656, 1 November 2004

