Socioeconomic position and healthy ageing: A systematic review of cross-sectional and longitudinal studies

•Socioeconomic inequalities in healthy ageing as a multidimensional construct is unclear.•There is evidence that higher education is associated with healthy ageing.•There is evidence that higher income/wealth is associated with healthy ageing.•The number of studies including other socioeconomic indi...

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Published inAgeing research reviews Vol. 69; p. 101365
Main Authors Wagg, Emma, Blyth, Fiona M., Cumming, Robert G., Khalatbari-Soltani, Saman
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier B.V 01.08.2021
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Summary:•Socioeconomic inequalities in healthy ageing as a multidimensional construct is unclear.•There is evidence that higher education is associated with healthy ageing.•There is evidence that higher income/wealth is associated with healthy ageing.•The number of studies including other socioeconomic indicators were limited.•Evidence-based mapping was used to report heterogeneity between studies. The association between socioeconomic position (SEP) and health is well-established. However, the association between SEP and healthy ageing as a multidimensional construct is unclear. We conducted a systematic review of peer-reviewed cross-sectional and longitudinal studies on the associations between SEP and multidimensional healthy ageing measures. Studies were identified from a systematic search across major electronic databases from inception to February 2021. Fourthy-five articles met inclusion criteria (26 cross-sectional and 19 longitudinal studies). There was no consistency in method of operationalizing healthy ageing across studies, domains included in the healthy ageing measures, or in the definition and number of levels of SEP indicators. Overall, regardless of heterogeneity between studies, a positive association between educational level (85.0 % of studies) and income/wealth (81.4 % of studies) and healthy ageing was evident. Regarding occupational position, evidence from 11 studies was inconclusive. The number of studies including home ownership, parenteral SEP, or composite SEP scores was insufficient to be able to draw a conclusion. There is evidence that socioeconomic inequalities, as assessed by educational level and income/wealth, are associated with healthy ageing. These findings, and the broader evidence base on SEP and healthy ageing, highlight the importance of addressing inequality through integrated health and social policies and strategies.
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ISSN:1568-1637
1872-9649
DOI:10.1016/j.arr.2021.101365