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Dive into the research topics where Sofie Van Regenmortel is active.

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Featured researches published by Sofie Van Regenmortel.


Research on Aging | 2016

Is volunteering in later life impeded or stimulated by other activities

Sarah Dury; Liesbeth De Donder; Nico De Witte; Dorien Brosens; An-Sofie Smetcoren; Sofie Van Regenmortel; Dominique Verté

Purpose: Volunteering among older adults has received increasing attention from researchers, policy makers, and associations. However, there remains a lack of knowledge in how volunteering is impacted by other activities in the lives of older adults. In order to understand activity engagement in later life, insights into the extent to which activities compete with or complement each other are necessary. Methods: Data for the present research were derived from the Belgian Aging Studies (N = 23,768). The main objective is to uncover the activities that impede or stimulate actual volunteering and/or the likeliness to volunteer at an older age. Results: Structural equation models indicate a strong positive correlation between altruistic types of activities and actual volunteering. Furthermore, older adults active in personal leisure activities are more drawn to be potential volunteers. Implications: The article demonstrates that the activity level of older people is not sufficient to understand volunteering, that is, a distinction between the types of activities is essential.


Educational Gerontology | 2018

Risk on Elder Abuse and Mistreatment - Instrument: Development, psychometric properties and qualitative user-evaluation

Liesbeth De Donder; Nico De Witte; Sofie Van Regenmortel; Sarah Dury; Eva Dierckx; Dominique Verté

ABSTRACT Prevalence data of elder abuse from social and health services only present a tip of the iceberg. A large amount of situations of abuse is left undetected. Professionals often lack knowledge and skills on the topic of abuse. Consequently, this paper focuses on supporting professionals to prevent and assess elder abuse by developing and testing the Risk on Elder Abuse and Mistreatment Instrument (REAMI), using a mixed method design. Quantitative data from a widespread screening among 1920 older clients of home care are analysed with exploratory and confirmatory analysis. In addition, 24 professionals who have used the REAMI have been qualitatively interviewed about their practical experience and critical reflection on the instrument and its use. These interviews were transcribed and content analysed. Findings provide evidence of good internal reliability and internal validity of the REAMI and its three dimensions: 1) risk factors of the older person, 2) risk factors of the environment, 3) signals of abuse and mistreatment. Users report an increase of knowledge and awareness among staff, satisfaction with the possibilities for prevention and the user-friendliness and brevity of the REAMI. However, some users are missing a follow-up protocol: what to do when risks are assessed? In the discussion, the argument is developed that the REAMI can be used to examine risk at elder abuse, although an overarching protocol to support prevention and intervention which embeds the detection instrument is needed.


Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics | 2018

Frailty differences in older adults’ use of informal and formal care

Deborah Lambotte; Liesbeth De Donder; Sofie Van Regenmortel; Bram Fret; Sarah Dury; An-Sofie Smetcoren; Eva Dierckx; Nico De Witte; Dominique Verté; Martinus J.M. Kardol

OBJECTIVES This study examines different combinations of informal and formal care use of older adults and investigates whether these combinations differ in terms of need for care (physical and psychological frailty) and enabling factors for informal and formal care use (social and environmental frailty). METHODS Using cross-sectional data from the Belgian Ageing Studies (survey, N = 38,066 community-dwelling older adults), Latent Class Analysis (LCA) is used to identify combinations of informal and formal care use. Bivariate analyses are used to explore the relationship between the different combinations of care use and frailty. RESULTS Latent Class Analysis (LCA) identified 8 different types of care use, which vary in combinations of informal and formal caregivers. Older adults who are more likely to combine care from family and care from all types of formal caregivers are more physically, psychologically and environmentally frail than expected. Older adults who are more likely to receive care only from nuclear family, or only from formal caregivers are more socially frail than expected. CONCLUSIONS Older adults with a higher need for care are more likely to receive care from different types of informal and formal caregivers. High environmental frailty and low social frailty are related with the use of care from different types of informal and formal caregivers. This study confirms that informal care can act as substitute for formal care. However, this substitute relationship becomes a complementary relationship in frail older adults. Policymakers should take into account that frailty in older adults affects the use of informal and formal care.


Quality of Life Research | 2017

Factors related to the Quality of Life of older prisoners

Stefaan De Smet; Liesbeth De Donder; Denis Ryan; Sofie Van Regenmortel; Dorien Brosens; Stijn Vandevelde

PurposesThere is evidence of an increasing emphasis on the relevance of the quality of life-paradigm as an outcome measure for clients in geriatric, forensic, as well as correctional care. This paper aims to explore to what extent variables that were categorized according to the main areas of the Good Lives Model (‘the self’, ‘the body’ and ‘social life’) are related to the quality of life domains of older imprisoned offenders.MethodsData were collected by means of a structured questionnaire administered in individual interviews with 93 older prisoners aged 60 years and over in 16 prisons of the Dutch-speaking region in Belgium. Characteristics of the main GLM-areas were identified by specifically designed items as well three validated instruments (psychiatric disorders, loneliness, and frailty). Dependent variables consisted of the four sub-domains of the WHOQOL-BREF instrument which measures quality of life in four domains, namely: (1) physical health, (2) psychological health, (3) social relationships, and (4) environment. Structural equation modelling (SEM) was used for statistical analysis.ResultsIndividual variables, such as satisfaction with activities, were related to the older prisoners’ QoL in several domains simultaneously. Other than suicidal ideation, psychopathological symptoms had no significant relation to quality of life.ConclusionsApproaches enabling older prisoner to disclose their interests, experiences, and feelings are important in prison. Special attention should be given to psychiatric and age-related symptoms of older prisoners, since they may not be noted by the prison staff, as older prisoners seem to be poorer self-advocates as compared to their younger peers.


International Journal of Aging & Human Development | 2017

Development and Validation of the Elder Learning Barriers Scale Among Older Chinese Adults

Renfeng Wang; Liesbeth De Donder; Free De Backer; Tao He; Sofie Van Regenmortel; Shihua Li; Koen Lombaerts

This study describes the development and validation of the Elder Learning Barriers (ELB) scale, which seeks to identify the obstacles that affect the level of educational participation of older adults. The process of item pool design and scale development is presented, as well as the testing and scale refinement procedure. The data were collected from a sample of 579 older Chinese adults (aged over 55) in the Xi’an region of China. After randomly splitting the sample for cross-validation purposes, the construct validity of the ELB scale was confirmed containing five dimensions: dispositional, informational, physical, situational, and institutional barriers. Furthermore, developmental differences in factor structure have been examined among older age groups. The results indicated that the scale demonstrated good reliability and validity. We conclude in general that the ELB scale appears to be a valuable instrument for examining the learning barriers that older Chinese citizens experience for participating in organized educational activities.


Journal of Population Ageing | 2016

Social Exclusion in Later Life: A Systematic Review of the Literature

Sofie Van Regenmortel; Liesbeth De Donder; Sarah Dury; An-Sofie Smetcoren; Nico De Witte; Dominique Verté


Social Indicators Research | 2017

Accumulation of Disadvantages: Prevalence and Categories of Old-Age Social Exclusion in Belgium

Sofie Van Regenmortel; Liesbeth De Donder; An-Sofie Smetcoren; Deborah Lambotte; Nico De Witte; Dominique Verté


European Journal of Ageing | 2017

Does active ageing contribute to life satisfaction for older people? Testing a new model of active ageing

Sara Marsillas; Liesbeth De Donder; Tinie Kardol; Sofie Van Regenmortel; Sarah Dury; Dorien Brosens; An-Sofie Smetcoren; Teresa Braña; Jesús A. Varela


Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences | 2015

Feelings of Unsafety among Older People: Psychometric Properties of the EFU-scale

Liesbeth De Donder; Nico De Witte; Sarah Dury; Tine Buffel; Dorien Brosens; An-Sofie Smetcoren; Emily Verté; Sofie Van Regenmortel; Dominique Verté


International Journal of Care and Caring | 2017

Socio-demographic, socio-economic and health need differences between types of care use in community-dwelling older adults

Bram Fret; Deborah Lambotte; Sofie Van Regenmortel; Sarah Dury; Nico De Witte; Eva Dierckx; Liesbeth De Donder; Dominique Verté

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Dominique Verté

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Sarah Dury

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Nico De Witte

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Dorien Brosens

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Deborah Lambotte

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Eva Dierckx

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Bram Fret

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Emily Verté

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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