Living arrangements, health and well-being: a European perspective
Harriet Young & Emily Grundy, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
[Project number 30053]
The data will be used to examine pathways to living arrangements and
the effects of these on associations with health in England and Wales.
We will use LS data to ascertain whether poorer health is associated with
longer term or most recent living arrangements and in particular to identify
(partially) the effect that health-related household type transitions
play in observed associations between living arrangements and health status.
Similarly we will analyse differences in the health of those living alone
at three or four consecutive census points compared with those who have
only recently started living alone.
This project focuses on the possible consequences of different types of living arrangements for the health and well-being of older people, and will be based on analysis of existing data sources. Demographic changes over the last century have led to older age structures throughout Europe, accompanied by major social, economic and family-related changes. There have been declines in the proportions of older people living with children and increases in proportions living alone. However, substantial differences between countries remain. Research to date indicates that the consequences of different living arrangements for the health and well-being of older people is not clear-cut, and may be influenced by factors including social ties outside the household, socio-economic factors and cultural norms.
In this research, the European Social Survey, the English Longitudinal
Study of Ageing and the Office for National Statistics Longitudinal Study
will be used to analyse associations between living arrangements and health
and well-being across Europe and in more detail for England and Wales.
The influence of extra-household support, socio-economic status and cultural
norms on this association will be examined. Additionally for England and
Wales, pathways to living arrangements and the effects of these on associations
with health will be analysed.
The project used the following census and events data:
- 1971 Census data
- 1981 Census data
- 1991 Census data
- 2001 Census data
- Births to LS member, 1971 to 2001
- Deaths of LS member, 1991 to 2004
This project was approved on 25 May 2006 and is supported by CeLSIUS.

 PATH.png)
