Int
J Aging Hum Dev 1993;37(3):227-46
Race, gender, and the effect of social supports on the use of health
services by elderly individuals.
Nelson MA.
Texas A&M University.
This study examines the effects of social supports on the use of health
services by elderly individuals, and whether those effects differ by race
or gender. Multiple regression analysis of the 5,151 baseline Longitudinal
Study on Aging (LSOA) respondents revealed that social supports, mainly
church attendance, increased the R2s when estimated separately within
race and gender groups in a statistically significant manner. The magnitude
of these increases, however, was small suggesting that their unique contribution
may be minimal. The effects of the social support variables on the use
of health services differed by race and gender. These differences, however,
were not consistent across the various measures of health services utilization.
PMID: 8244566 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]