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The Canadian survey of health, lifestyle and ageing with multiple sclerosis: methodology and initial results

OBJECTIVE: People with multiple sclerosis (MS) are living longer so strategies to enhance long-term health are garnering more interest. We aimed to create a profile of ageing with MS in Canada by recruiting 1250 (5% of the Canadian population above 55 years with MS) participants and focusing data co...

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Autores principales: Ploughman, Michelle, Beaulieu, Serge, Harris, Chelsea, Hogan, Stephen, Manning, Olivia J, Alderdice, Penelope W, Fisk, John D, Sadovnick, A Dessa, O'Connor, Paul, Morrow, Sarah A, Metz, Luanne M, Smyth, Penelope, Mayo, Nancy, Marrie, Ruth Ann, Knox, Katherine B, Stefanelli, Mark, Godwin, Marshall
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4120418/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25011993
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005718
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author Ploughman, Michelle
Beaulieu, Serge
Harris, Chelsea
Hogan, Stephen
Manning, Olivia J
Alderdice, Penelope W
Fisk, John D
Sadovnick, A Dessa
O'Connor, Paul
Morrow, Sarah A
Metz, Luanne M
Smyth, Penelope
Mayo, Nancy
Marrie, Ruth Ann
Knox, Katherine B
Stefanelli, Mark
Godwin, Marshall
author_facet Ploughman, Michelle
Beaulieu, Serge
Harris, Chelsea
Hogan, Stephen
Manning, Olivia J
Alderdice, Penelope W
Fisk, John D
Sadovnick, A Dessa
O'Connor, Paul
Morrow, Sarah A
Metz, Luanne M
Smyth, Penelope
Mayo, Nancy
Marrie, Ruth Ann
Knox, Katherine B
Stefanelli, Mark
Godwin, Marshall
author_sort Ploughman, Michelle
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: People with multiple sclerosis (MS) are living longer so strategies to enhance long-term health are garnering more interest. We aimed to create a profile of ageing with MS in Canada by recruiting 1250 (5% of the Canadian population above 55 years with MS) participants and focusing data collection on health and lifestyle factors, disability, participation and quality of life to determine factors associated with healthy ageing. DESIGN: National multicentre postal survey. SETTING: Recruitment from Canadian MS clinics, MS Society of Canada chapters and newspaper advertisements. PARTICIPANTS: People aged 55 years or older with MS symptoms more than 20 years. OUTCOME MEASURES: Validated outcome measures and custom-designed questions examining MS disease characteristics, living situation, disability, comorbid conditions, fatigue, health behaviours, mental health, social support, impact of MS and others. RESULTS: Of the 921 surveys, 743 were returned (80.7% response rate). Participants (mean age 64.6±6.2 years) reported living with MS symptoms for an average of 32.9±9.5 years and 28.6% were either wheelchair users or bedridden. There was only 5.4% missing data and 709 respondents provided optional qualitative information. According to data derived from the 2012 Canadian Community Health Survey of Canadians above 55 years of age, older people with MS from this survey sample are about eight times less likely to be employed full-time. Older people with MS were less likely to engage in regular physical activity (26.7%) compared with typical older Canadians (45.2%). However, they were more likely to abstain from alcohol and smoking. CONCLUSIONS: Despite barriers to participation, we were able to recruit and gather detailed responses (with good data quality) from a large proportion of older Canadians with MS. The data suggest that this sample of older people with MS is less likely to be employed, are less active and more disabled than other older Canadians.
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spelling pubmed-41204182014-08-05 The Canadian survey of health, lifestyle and ageing with multiple sclerosis: methodology and initial results Ploughman, Michelle Beaulieu, Serge Harris, Chelsea Hogan, Stephen Manning, Olivia J Alderdice, Penelope W Fisk, John D Sadovnick, A Dessa O'Connor, Paul Morrow, Sarah A Metz, Luanne M Smyth, Penelope Mayo, Nancy Marrie, Ruth Ann Knox, Katherine B Stefanelli, Mark Godwin, Marshall BMJ Open Neurology OBJECTIVE: People with multiple sclerosis (MS) are living longer so strategies to enhance long-term health are garnering more interest. We aimed to create a profile of ageing with MS in Canada by recruiting 1250 (5% of the Canadian population above 55 years with MS) participants and focusing data collection on health and lifestyle factors, disability, participation and quality of life to determine factors associated with healthy ageing. DESIGN: National multicentre postal survey. SETTING: Recruitment from Canadian MS clinics, MS Society of Canada chapters and newspaper advertisements. PARTICIPANTS: People aged 55 years or older with MS symptoms more than 20 years. OUTCOME MEASURES: Validated outcome measures and custom-designed questions examining MS disease characteristics, living situation, disability, comorbid conditions, fatigue, health behaviours, mental health, social support, impact of MS and others. RESULTS: Of the 921 surveys, 743 were returned (80.7% response rate). Participants (mean age 64.6±6.2 years) reported living with MS symptoms for an average of 32.9±9.5 years and 28.6% were either wheelchair users or bedridden. There was only 5.4% missing data and 709 respondents provided optional qualitative information. According to data derived from the 2012 Canadian Community Health Survey of Canadians above 55 years of age, older people with MS from this survey sample are about eight times less likely to be employed full-time. Older people with MS were less likely to engage in regular physical activity (26.7%) compared with typical older Canadians (45.2%). However, they were more likely to abstain from alcohol and smoking. CONCLUSIONS: Despite barriers to participation, we were able to recruit and gather detailed responses (with good data quality) from a large proportion of older Canadians with MS. The data suggest that this sample of older people with MS is less likely to be employed, are less active and more disabled than other older Canadians. BMJ Publishing Group 2014-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4120418/ /pubmed/25011993 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005718 Text en Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
spellingShingle Neurology
Ploughman, Michelle
Beaulieu, Serge
Harris, Chelsea
Hogan, Stephen
Manning, Olivia J
Alderdice, Penelope W
Fisk, John D
Sadovnick, A Dessa
O'Connor, Paul
Morrow, Sarah A
Metz, Luanne M
Smyth, Penelope
Mayo, Nancy
Marrie, Ruth Ann
Knox, Katherine B
Stefanelli, Mark
Godwin, Marshall
The Canadian survey of health, lifestyle and ageing with multiple sclerosis: methodology and initial results
title The Canadian survey of health, lifestyle and ageing with multiple sclerosis: methodology and initial results
title_full The Canadian survey of health, lifestyle and ageing with multiple sclerosis: methodology and initial results
title_fullStr The Canadian survey of health, lifestyle and ageing with multiple sclerosis: methodology and initial results
title_full_unstemmed The Canadian survey of health, lifestyle and ageing with multiple sclerosis: methodology and initial results
title_short The Canadian survey of health, lifestyle and ageing with multiple sclerosis: methodology and initial results
title_sort canadian survey of health, lifestyle and ageing with multiple sclerosis: methodology and initial results
topic Neurology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4120418/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25011993
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005718
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