Summary information

Study title

Vitality 90+ Survey 2010

Creator

Jylhä, Marja (University of Tampere. School of Health Sciences)
Hervonen, Antti (University of Tampere. School of Health Sciences)

Study number / PID

FSD3012 (FSD)

urn:nbn:fi:fsd:T-FSD3012 (URN)

10.60686/t-fsd3012 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Vitality 90+

Vitality 90+ is a multidisciplinary research project initiated by Antti Hervonen and Marja Jylhä in 1995. The project focuses on people aged 90 and over residing in Tampere. The project is motivated by rapid changes in the population structure and the increase in longevity. Central research themes in the project include trends in health and functioning, services and informal care, circumstances and subjective experiences of the long-lived, and biology of aging and longevity. Several kinds of data have been collected with different methods, such as longitudinal mail surveys, health...

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Abstract

The survey studied longevity and the oldest-old by charting the care, everyday life, and physical activity and capability of people aged 90 and over living in Tampere. The respondents who lived at home were asked what kind of housing they lived in (e.g. ordinary home, sheltered housing), who they lived with, whether someone helped them at home, who helped them the most with everyday tasks, and whether a housekeeper or home helper visited them regularly. The rest of the questions were asked from both those respondents who lived at home as well as the ones in institutional care. These questions surveyed when the respondents had last been out of the house/apartment/room, whether they used any mobility aids when moving about outside, how well the respondents were able to move and do everyday activities (e.g. walk 400 metres, use the stairs, dress and undress, and get in and out of bed), what their health status was like, which illnesses diagnosed by a doctor they had, and how well they were able to hear and see. Finally, the respondents were asked whether they thought it is a good thing for a person to live to be 100 years old, when they had last met their children, when they had last talked on the phone with someone close to them, and whether the circumstances of old people were better or worse than before. Background variables included the respondent's gender, marital status, and education as well as variables charting where the respondent was at the time of responding (e.g. ordinary home, old people's home, hospital) and who responded or aided in responding to the survey; the respondent him/herself, a family member, relative or acquaintance, or a home helper.

Methodology

Data collection period

2010

Country

Finland

Time dimension

Longitudinal: Cohort/Event-based
Longitudinal: Trend/Repeated cross-section

Analysis unit

Individual

Universe

Elderly people aged 90 and over in Tampere

Sampling procedure

Total universe/Complete enumeration

Kind of data

Quantitative

Data collection mode

Self-administered questionnaire: Paper

Access

Publisher

Finnish Social Science Data Archive

Publication year

2016

Terms of data access

The dataset is (D) available only by permission from the data depositor/creator.

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