Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-020-01919-8
Title: Bathing and toileting difficulties of older adults in rural China: the role of environment
Authors: Liu, Changxi
Fong, Joelle H. 
Hoh, Jasmon WT 
Wu, Hailin
Dong, Yunsheng
Gu, Danan
Feng, Qiushi 
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Geriatrics & Gerontology
Gerontology
Disability
ADL
Toileting
Bathing
Environment
Older adults
China
Rural area
NEIGHBORHOOD ENVIRONMENT
LIVING ARRANGEMENTS
DISABILITY TRENDS
HEALTH
ASSOCIATIONS
MORTALITY
PATTERNS
POLICY
URBAN
Issue Date: 10-Dec-2020
Publisher: BMC
Citation: Liu, Changxi, Fong, Joelle H., Hoh, Jasmon WT, Wu, Hailin, Dong, Yunsheng, Gu, Danan, Feng, Qiushi (2020-12-10). Bathing and toileting difficulties of older adults in rural China: the role of environment. BMC GERIATRICS 20 (1). ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-020-01919-8
Abstract: Background: For older adults, difficulties in bathing and toileting are often the most prevalent in the index of Activities of daily living (ADL). This study aims to examine how environmental factors are associated with difficulty of bathing and toileting among older adults in rural China. Method: The data are from the 2014 Thousand-Village Survey (TVS), a national survey of Chinese rural residents of old age. The sample consists of 10,689 subjects, 55 years or older, from 536 villages across all provinces of China. Logistic regressions were applied to examine how difficulty of bathing and toileting was related to environmental factors such as geographic location, neighbourhood amenity, and related facilities of bathing and toileting. Results: Older adults living in the Southern regions of China had lesser difficulty in bathing and toileting than those living in Northern China, controlling for other confounders. Better neighbourhood conditions also reduced the likelihood of having such disabilities. Persons who bathed indoors without showering facilities, in public facilities, and outdoors were significantly more likely to have bathing disability than those who showered indoors with facility. Rural older adults who used pedestal pans and indoor buckets for toileting were more likely to have toileting disability than those who used indoor squatting facilities. Conclusion: Environmental barriers were associated with functional disability among older adults in rural China, but the disabled individuals may change their environments to adapt to their functional capabilities. Our findings suggest that it is imperative to promote the use of showering facilities and pedestal pans for toileting in rural China.
Source Title: BMC GERIATRICS
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/185648
ISSN: 1471-2318
DOI: 10.1186/s12877-020-01919-8
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