TY - JOUR
T1 - Subjective expectations regarding length and health-related quality of life in Hungary: results from an empirical investigation
AU - Péntek, M
AU - Brodszky, V
AU - Gulácsi, AL
AU - Hajdú, O
AU - van Exel, Job
AU - Brouwer, Werner
AU - Gulácsi, L
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - BACKGROUND: Subjective expectations regarding future health are rarely studied, yet may have implications for medical decision making, health behaviour and health economic analysis.
OBJECTIVE: To study people's subjective expectations regarding length and future quality of life in Hungary and compare these with previous findings from the Netherlands.
METHODS: A cross-sectional survey was performed, using a questionnaire that was put on a highly frequented web journal during 1 day. Main socio-demographic variables and health status of the voluntary participants were registered using the EQ-5D questionnaire. People were asked about the age they expected to live and the health status they expected to have at ages 60, 70, 80 and 90, using the EQ-5D descriptive system. Responses were matched and compared to age- and gender-specific life expectancy data from the Hungarian National Statistics and to age- and gender-specific EQ-5D scores from a prior nationally representative survey in Hungary.
RESULTS: In total, 9407 people were included in the analysis with mean age of 36.1 (SD 10.6) years, mainly qualified (degree 74.0%), employed (86.0%) men (67.1%). People overestimated their life expectancy (women, 1.6; men, 8.2 years) and expected a sharp deterioration in health at the age 70. Age, current health status, perception of a healthy lifestyle and kins' age at death were important explanatory factors for subjective expectations. Subjective life expectancy correlates strongly with expected future health status.
CONCLUSIONS: The striking similarities between two surveys from distinct nations suggest that people's (mis)expectations regarding length and future quality of life are probably rather generalizable between jurisdictions within Europe.
AB - BACKGROUND: Subjective expectations regarding future health are rarely studied, yet may have implications for medical decision making, health behaviour and health economic analysis.
OBJECTIVE: To study people's subjective expectations regarding length and future quality of life in Hungary and compare these with previous findings from the Netherlands.
METHODS: A cross-sectional survey was performed, using a questionnaire that was put on a highly frequented web journal during 1 day. Main socio-demographic variables and health status of the voluntary participants were registered using the EQ-5D questionnaire. People were asked about the age they expected to live and the health status they expected to have at ages 60, 70, 80 and 90, using the EQ-5D descriptive system. Responses were matched and compared to age- and gender-specific life expectancy data from the Hungarian National Statistics and to age- and gender-specific EQ-5D scores from a prior nationally representative survey in Hungary.
RESULTS: In total, 9407 people were included in the analysis with mean age of 36.1 (SD 10.6) years, mainly qualified (degree 74.0%), employed (86.0%) men (67.1%). People overestimated their life expectancy (women, 1.6; men, 8.2 years) and expected a sharp deterioration in health at the age 70. Age, current health status, perception of a healthy lifestyle and kins' age at death were important explanatory factors for subjective expectations. Subjective life expectancy correlates strongly with expected future health status.
CONCLUSIONS: The striking similarities between two surveys from distinct nations suggest that people's (mis)expectations regarding length and future quality of life are probably rather generalizable between jurisdictions within Europe.
U2 - 10.1111/j.1369-7625.2012.00797.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1369-7625.2012.00797.x
M3 - Article
VL - 17
SP - 696
EP - 709
JO - Health Expectations
JF - Health Expectations
SN - 1369-6513
IS - 5
ER -