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BMC Health Services Research | 2016

Factors predicting health services use among older people in China: An analysis of the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study 2013

Cathy Honge Gong; Hal Kendig; Xiaojun He

BackgroundRapid population ageing in China is increasing the numbers of older people who are likely to require health services in response to higher levels of poor perceived health and chronic diseases. Understanding factors influencing health services use at late life will help to plan for increasing needs for health care, reducing inequalities in health services use and releasing severe pressures on a highly variable health care system that has constrained public resources and increasing reliance on health insurance and user payments.MethodsDrawing on the nationally representative China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study 2013 data, we apply the Andersen healthcare utilization conceptual model to binary logistic regression multivariate analyses to examine the joint predictors of physical examinations, outpatient and inpatient care among the middle-aged and elderly in China.ResultsThe multivariate analyses find that both physical examinations and inpatient care rates increase significantly by age when health deteriorates. Females are less likely to use inpatient care. Significant socio-economic variations exist in healthcare utilization. Older people with higher education, communist party membership, urban residence, non-agricultural household registration, better financial situation are more likely to have physical examinations or inpatient care. Factors influencing all three types of health care utilization are household expenditure, losing a partner, having multiple chronic diseases or perceiving poor health. With activities of daily living limitations or pain increases the probability of seeing a doctor while with functional loss increases the rates of having physical examinations, but being the ethnic minorities, no social health insurance, with depression, fair or poor memory could be a barrier to having physical examinations or seeing a doctor, which might delay the early diagnose of severe health problems among these groups. Not drinking, not smoking and regular physical exercises are adaptations after having health problems.ConclusionsAs a rapidly ageing society, in order to address the increasing needs and inequalities in health care utilization, China is facing a massive challenge to reform the current health care system, improve equitable access to health insurance and financial affordability for the most disadvantaged, as well as to provide more health education and information to the general public.


Journal of Aging and Health | 2016

Health Expectancies in Adults Aged 50 Years or Older in China

Hao Luo; Gloria H.Y. Wong; Terry Y. S. Lum; Cathy Honge Gong; Hal Kendig

Objective: The purpose of this study is to understand the functional health of older adults in China and to assess the potential for advancing healthy and active aging. Method: Data of 13,739 older adults aged 50 years and older from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study in 2011 were analyzed. Life expectancy in good perceived health, chronic-disease-free life expectancy, active life expectancy, and severe impairment-free life expectancy were calculated using Sullivan’s method. Results: At age 50 years, older adults had a life expectancy in good perceived health of 7.0 and 6.7 years in men and women, respectively. They would remain chronic-disease-free for 8.4 and 8.6 years, without activity limitation for 23.6 and 26.0 years, and severe impairment-free for 21.4 and 24.2 years. Discussion: The world’s largest aging population was spending a substantial proportion of remaining life years in suboptimal health and well-being, while remaining largely independent in basic self-care without severe impairments.


Australasian Journal on Ageing | 2018

Impacts of voluntary and involuntary workforce transitions at mature ages: Longitudinal evidence from HILDA

Cathy Honge Gong; Hal Kendig

To assess the changes in health, well‐being and welfare dependency associated with yearly workforce transitions from working to not working among people aged 45–64 years.


SSM-Population Health | 2017

Life course influences on later life health in China: Childhood health exposure and socioeconomic mediators during adulthood

Hal Kendig; Cathy Honge Gong; Vasoontara Yiengprugsawan; Merril Silverstein; James Nazroo

China’s unprecedented population aging and social and economic change raise important issues concerning life course determinants of advantage or disadvantage into later life. Data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS) 2013 were analysed to identify the influence of childhood health on later life health as indicated by self-rated health and how this influence could be mediated by social and economic positions (SEP) and resources later in the life span. CHARLS provides nationally representative data on 18, 000 individuals aged 45 years and above in approximately 150 districts and 450 villages. Both multivariate logit regression model and KHB method (Karlson/Holm/Breen method) were applied to examine and decompose the life span influences on later life health. The results show that the childhood health, accounts for approximately half of the effect directly and another half of the effect indirectly through social and economic variations during adulthood. Relative living standard, marital status and urban residence are the most significant and important social and economic mediators for men; For women, living standard and secondary schooling are most influential while marital status is not significant. Implications for social and economic policies to improve later life health are discussed.


Child Indicators Research | 2012

Spatial Dimensions of Child Social Exclusion Risk in Australia: Widening the Scope

Annie Abello; Cathy Honge Gong; Anne Daly; Justine McNamara


The Australasian Journal of Regional Studies | 2014

ECONOMIC ADVANTAGE AND DISADVANTAGE AMONG OLDER AUSTRALIANS: PRODUCING NATIONAL AND SMALL AREA PROFILES

Cathy Honge Gong; Hal Kendig; Ann Harding; Riyana Miranti; Justine McNamara


Economic Papers: A journal of applied economics and policy | 2012

Evidence of multiple life stage disadvantages for small areas in Australia

Robert Tanton; Cathy Honge Gong; Ann Harding


Archive | 2011

Understanding Life Satisfaction and the Education Puzzle in Australia: A profile from HILDA Wave 9

Cathy Honge Gong; Rebecca Cassells; Marcia Keegan


Journal of Housing for The Elderly | 2017

Preferences and Predictors of Aging in Place: Longitudinal Evidence from Melbourne, Australia

Hal Kendig; Cathy Honge Gong; Lisa Cannon; Colette Browning


Archive | 2016

Ageing and social change in Australia

Cathy Honge Gong; Hal Kendig

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Hal Kendig

Australian National University

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Ann Harding

University of Canberra

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Anne Daly

University of Canberra

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Lisa Cannon

Australian National University

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