Locomotive syndrome affects the acquisition of long-term care insurance system certification.

Journal of orthopaedic science : official journal of the Japanese Orthopaedic Association(2022)

Cited 0|Views3
No score
Abstract
BACKGROUND:Locomotive syndrome is closely related to the state of long-term care. This study aimed to longitudinally evaluate long-term care certification occurrence in locomotive syndrome using data from the Miyagawa study. METHODS:The study included 470 individuals (168 males, 302 females; mean age, 70.7 years) with no long-term care certification at the time of participation in the study. Locomotive syndrome was classified into three stages (stages 1-3) according to the 25-question Geriatric Locomotive Function Scale. Analysis was performed with long-term care certification occurrence as the endpoint and locomotive syndrome stage as the explanatory variable. RESULTS:The median observation period was 6.3 years, and long-term care certification occurred in 69 (34.2%) and 30 (11.2%) of the participants in the locomotive syndrome and no-locomotive syndrome groups, respectively. Independent risk factors of long-term care certification occurrence were locomotive syndrome stage-3 (hazard ratio: 2.27) in the total number of studies, and locomotive syndrome stages 2 (hazard ratio: 2.49) and 3 (hazard ratio: 2.79) in females. Locomotive syndrome stage-3 was an independent risk factor in long-term care certification occurrence due to musculoskeletal disorders (hazard ratio: 3.89). CONCLUSIONS:The higher the locomotive syndrome stage, especially in females, the higher the risk of long-term care certification occurrence.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined