JOURNAL OF MEDICAL RESEARCH<br />
<br />
FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH QUALITY OF LIFE<br />
AMONG ELDERLY IN URBAN VIETNAM<br />
Dao Thi Minh An¹, Vu Toan Thinh¹, Dunne P Michael²<br />
¹Institute for Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Hanoi Medical University<br />
²School of Public Health, Queensland University of Technology, Australia.<br />
Quality of life (QoL) among the elderly is a big problem in Vietnam due to a growing proportion of the<br />
elderly in Vietnam while many conditions, including policies, social facilities, culture and other factors are not ready to support for QoL among elderly. This cross-sectional study was conducted to<br />
explore QoL and factors associated with QoL among the elderly in Trung Tu ward, Ha Noi, Viet Nam.<br />
The findings showed that the four domains of QoL the among elderly fluctuated around 50. Mean<br />
scores of social and psychological QoL were higher than those in the physical and environmental<br />
domains. A statistically significant difference in mean scores of QoL by socio-demographics was recorded (age profile, educational attainment, and occupation). All four domains of QoL were positively<br />
correlated with each other. Furthermore, age, psychological, social and environmental domains collectively contributed to 47.59% of the physical domain; while the physical, social, and environmental<br />
domains accounted for 56.13% of the psychological domain. We also found that occupation (worker), as well as physical, psychological, and environmental metrics, accounted for 34.19% of the social domain. Moreover, physical, psychological, social domains and occupation (home-wife) collectively accounted for 45.92% of the transformation of environmental domain. Our study suggests that<br />
it is essential to evaluate overall QoL to have a comprehensive view of its effects in the long run.<br />
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Keywords: Quality of Life, Elderly, Hanoi, WHO QoL-Bref<br />
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I. INTRODUCTION<br />
Vietnam’s population structure is in a period of dramatic change, presenting a number of public health benefits as well as challenges. Today, one of the most prominent<br />
issues is how to address a rapidly growing<br />
Corresponding author: Vu Toan Thinh, Institute for<br />
Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Hanoi Medical<br />
University<br />
Email: vutoanthinhdhy@gmail.com<br />
Received: 05 June 2017<br />
Accepted: 16 November 2017<br />
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elderly population. Statistics from the Living<br />
Standard Survey of Households in Vietnam<br />
showed that the number of elderly people<br />
(defined as men and women aged 60 years<br />
plus) grew from 3.71 million people in 1979<br />
(6.9% of the total population) to 7.72 million<br />
in 2009 (9% of the total population). At this<br />
rate, by 2020, it is estimated Vietnam’s elderly population will be greater than 12 million [1].<br />
With this in mind, quality of life (QoL)<br />
among the elderly is the most pressing isJMR 111 E2 (2) - 2018<br />
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sue. QoL is a multi-dimensional, highly<br />
subjective concept and, as recommended<br />
by the World Health Organization (WHO),<br />
is measured using four major domains, including physical, psychological, social, and<br />
environmental [2]. Within these categories,<br />
QoL has its own characteristics according to<br />
different economic and socio-cultural levels,<br />
producing trend where an overall negatively<br />
asociates with age QoL [3].<br />
Within Vietnam’s cultural context of<br />
multiple generations living together in the<br />
same household, as well as the impact of<br />
urbanization on a rapidly aging population,<br />
QoL and mental disorders among the elderly need to be paid more attention. A recent study conducted in 8 provinces on the<br />
health status of Vietnam’s elderly population<br />
showed that about 95% of the participants<br />
were infected with at least one disease. On<br />
average an elderly person suffers from 2.6<br />
diseases. With this in mind, about 23% of<br />
the elderly people have difficulties in their<br />
daily life, of which more than 90% need supports from other people [4]. According to the<br />
statistic of the National Institute of Gerontology, 9.2% of the Vietnamese population<br />
suffer from depression, one third of which<br />
were elderly and largely retired populations<br />
in major cities [5; 6].<br />
This is an important point to understand<br />
in an age of rapid urbanization. The proportion of elderly in urban areas is quickly rising<br />
and becoming a far more difficult problem<br />
to properly address. Compared to the elderly living in rural areas, the elderly in urban<br />
zones have distinct lifestyles such as extensive free time, more available information<br />
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relating to health problems, but most of all,<br />
less integrated neighborhood relationships<br />
compared to those in rural areas. Further,<br />
after retirement, may confront psychological<br />
loneliness, emptiness, and even abandonment by their children and neighbors, this<br />
would put the elderly in isolated situations.<br />
Hanoi is the capital of Viet Nam where<br />
there is a rapidly developing economy and<br />
growing population in which many Vietnamese households have 2 to 3 generations live<br />
together [7]. QoL of the elderly in Hanoi after retirement is often influenced by many<br />
factors such as home economics, relationship with their spouse and children, social<br />
issue, physical and mental health, and the<br />
medical system [8 - 10]. However, few studies have specifically analyzed the extent<br />
that these factors impact QoL among the<br />
elderly, especially among those living in urban wards in Hanoi. In Vietnam, there were<br />
some studies conducted on QoL among the<br />
elderly [11]; however, none focused on the<br />
population living in major cities.<br />
Therefore, this study aims to analyze the<br />
quality of life based on the four main domains among the elderly population living in<br />
Hanoi’s Trung Tu ward.<br />
<br />
II. SUBJECTS AND METHODS<br />
1. Subjects<br />
Target population is the elderly living in<br />
urban areas in Hanoi city. Particularly, the<br />
study population is defined as the elderly<br />
living in Trung Tu ward, Hanoi. Participants<br />
who were recruited into this study if they met<br />
the following criteria 1) People who living in<br />
Trung Tu ward, Hanoi for at least 1 year; 2)<br />
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Aged ≥ 60 years old (according to the ordinance of the elderly, issued by the President of the National Assembly on 28th April<br />
2000, the elderly are defined as citizens of<br />
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam from 60<br />
years old or more [12]); and 3) Willing to<br />
participate in this study after giving informed<br />
consent. Individuals were excluded if they<br />
were living in Hanoi temporarily, refused to<br />
participate, or had difficulties in understanding or completing the questionnaire.<br />
2. Methods<br />
Research site<br />
This cross-sectional study was conducted in Trung Tu ward, Hanoi, which is located in Northern Viet Nam. This ward has one<br />
of the densest populations in Hanoi and is<br />
mainly comprised of government officers<br />
that live in 62 dormitories and 2 residential<br />
districts with convenient transportation and<br />
close proximity to entertainment venues,<br />
national hospitals, and schools. Until 2012,<br />
there were 1,593 elderly people in Trung Tu,<br />
accounting for 11.78% of the total population of the ward.<br />
Sample size and data collection<br />
This is a pilot study, so we decided on<br />
a convenience sample of 2% (or 299) of<br />
Trung Tu ward’s total elderly population,<br />
who volunteered for the study. The first step<br />
of recruiting participants was effectively<br />
announcing the study. Ten health collaborators of Trung Tu’s health center wrote an<br />
introduction about the study and announced<br />
the recruitment on the boards at dwelling<br />
areas that they are in charge of. The announcement ordered those who wanted to<br />
voluntarily participate in the study to call a<br />
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toll-free number for registration. After being<br />
contacted by potential subjects, the second step was to screen them for eligibility<br />
using a questionnaire that assessed each<br />
participant’s recruiting criteria. They were<br />
then recruited into the study based on these<br />
criteria until the target sample size of 299<br />
elderly people was met. In the last step of<br />
sampling, collaborators contacted registered participants at home and provided<br />
them with consent forms. After reading the<br />
consent form, if the elderly agree to participate in the study, they would then receive a<br />
self-administered questionnaire from collaborators. They then allowed at least 2 weeks<br />
for participants to complete their questionnaires and return them to health collaborators in Trung Tu ward, either by themselves<br />
or their relatives. If their relatives delivered<br />
the questionnaire, it would be sealed in<br />
an envelope to ensure confidentiality. The<br />
self-administered questionnaires were immediately screened to check for missing<br />
information to ensure participants could circle responses they missed. If their relatives<br />
delivered their questionnaires, we used the<br />
telephone number which was recorded on<br />
that questionnaire to call the elderly. After<br />
that, the participants' phone number was<br />
deleted to secure their personal information. If the elderly refused to answer, that<br />
questionnaire was considered as ineligible.<br />
Measures<br />
Demographics: Includes 7 questions<br />
about participants’ age, marital status (married vs. unmarried), education level, living<br />
arrangements, and occupation before retirement.<br />
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Quality of Life: WHO QoL-Bref questionnaire is self-assessment that antains<br />
24 items, each presenting one facet of QoL<br />
and two “benchmark” items in an individual’s overall QoL and general health. The<br />
facets are defined as those aspects of life<br />
that are considered to contribute to a person’s QoL. QoL comprises of four main domains – physical health (7 items relating to<br />
pain and discomfort, dependence on medical treatment, energy and fatigue, mobility,<br />
sleep and rest, activities of daily living, and<br />
working capacity), psychological health (6<br />
items relating to positive feelings, spirituality, religion and personal beliefs, thinking,<br />
learning, memory and concentration, body<br />
image, self-esteem, negative feelings), social relationship (3 items relating to personal<br />
relations, sex life, practical social support),<br />
and environment (8 items relating to physical safety and security, physical environment, financial resources, information and<br />
skills, recreation and leisure, home environment, access to health and social care, and<br />
transportation). These facets were scored<br />
on a Likert scale from 1 to 5 with 1 = Very<br />
poor, 2 = Poor, 3 = Neither poor or good, 4 =<br />
Good, and 5 = Very good; 1 = Very satisfied,<br />
2 = Dissatisfied, 3 = Neither dissatisfied or<br />
satisfied, 4 = Satisfied, and 5 = Very satisfied; 1 = Not at all, 2 = A little, 3 = A moderate amount, 4 = Very much, and 5 = Extremely; or 1 = Never, 2 = Seldom, 3 = Quite<br />
often, 4 = Very often, and 5 = Always. The<br />
raw score from each domain of QoL include<br />
varying scales; for instance, the physical<br />
domain ranges from 7 to 35 points; psychological domain ranges from 6 to 30 points;<br />
social domain scores ranges from 3 to 15<br />
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points; and environmental domain are from<br />
8 to 40 points. The raw scores of each domain were then converted to a scale of 0 to<br />
100 to compare with other populations, with<br />
lower scores indicating poor QoL. A domain<br />
was treated as missing when over 20% of<br />
its items were missing. With regard to QoL<br />
scores, they are on a positive scale (higher scores represent better QoL) and there<br />
is no cut-off point to determine a specific<br />
score by which the QoL could be assessed<br />
as “good” or “bad” [13].<br />
Data analysis<br />
Data had been cleaned by checking<br />
missing data before it was entered into the<br />
database. Data was entered and cleaned<br />
for outlier and illogical data using Epidata<br />
software, then converted into file.data to be<br />
analyzed in Stata version 10.<br />
The results were initially analyzed using<br />
means, standard deviations, and frequencies. Mean and standard deviation were<br />
used to assess normal distribution. Subsequently, Man-Whitney tests were employed<br />
to compare means between the four domains of QoL by socio-demographics.<br />
The relationships between each domain<br />
of QoL were identified by conducting Spearman tests, since domains of QoL were not<br />
normally distributed. To analyze the influence of independent variables of each domain of QoL, bivariate and multiple linear<br />
regression analysis were used, in which<br />
dependent variables were transformed into<br />
ranks because of the absence of normal<br />
distribution (physical and social variable<br />
was squared to meet this condition). Some<br />
socio-demographic factors (age, marital<br />
status, gender, occupation, education lev117<br />
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els, and living arrangement) and significant factors in bivariate linear regression or<br />
in literature documents were then put into<br />
multiple linear regression for the full model.<br />
The final model was selected by performing<br />
stepwise linear regression. The significance<br />
level adopted for statistical test was 5%.<br />
Co-efficient, constant, p value, confidence<br />
interval and R-square for each model were<br />
calculated and presented.<br />
The final model was tested for its fitness<br />
by 1) checking its linear predicted value<br />
(_hat) and linear predicted value squared<br />
(_hatsq); 2) check goodness of fit ("predict<br />
resid, r"; 3), by checking for multi-collinearity.<br />
3. Ethics<br />
The risk of discomfort to participants and<br />
risk of confidentiality loss were marginal.<br />
There were some questions about individual feelings among the elderly about their<br />
happiness with their life, family members,<br />
sex life, and surrounding physical environment, as well as their social connectedness.<br />
To reduce these risks, in the consent form,<br />
participants were advised that they can withdraw at any time and that they can refuse<br />
to answer any question which made them<br />
uncomfortable. They were also advised that<br />
all their refusal or withdrawal will not have<br />
any effect on them in any way. Moreover,<br />
an anonymous self-administered questionnaire was developed and used, in which<br />
can complete by participants without the<br />
survey privately. Additionally, participants<br />
were asked to return their completed questionnaire by themselves to the field workers,<br />
who are outside the participants’ wards. The<br />
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consent form with participants’ agreement<br />
to participate in the study and their administration group numbers was detached from<br />
the main body of the questionnaire and sent<br />
to the principle investigator (PI) to be securely stored. Therefore, all individual information will be separate throughout the data<br />
collection procedure. Our approach was to<br />
ensure that participants feel that they have<br />
control over the proceedings of the survey.<br />
They were clearly advised that all information is anonymous and will only be analyzed<br />
at the group level. In the consent form, the<br />
PI’s contact number was printed and participants were instructed to if they have any<br />
questions. If participants do become distressed during or after filling out the questionnaire, they could also contact the PI for<br />
further counseling.<br />
All survey questionnaires were anonymous (no name and individual address<br />
identified) and securely stored. This study<br />
was submitted and approved by the Ethical<br />
Committee of the School of Public Health<br />
and accepted in May, 2012.<br />
<br />
III. RESULTS<br />
Among the 299 participants, the proportion of males to females was balanced at<br />
48.8% and 51.2%, respectively. The mean<br />
age of study participants was 70.6 years,<br />
while the mean age of males was higher<br />
than females (p < 0.05). The proportion of<br />
the elderly in the group under 70 years was<br />
45.5% compared to these age 70 years and<br />
older 54.5%. The majority of participants<br />
(40.6%) were post-graduation, working<br />
as government officers (80.3%), married<br />
(84.6%) and living primarily with their husJMR 111 E2 (2) - 2018<br />
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