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The purpose of this study was to investigate what items elderly persons living at home consider important for satisfaction in daily life and what factor structure is obtained by a principal components analysis. Two percent of the residents 60 years old or over of Yahatanishi Ward, Kitakyushu, were randomly sampled as subjects. A questionnaire asking residents to select items considered important in daily life was sent by mail, and 722 responses (72.5%) were eligible for analysis. "Health", "social security and pension" and "self-care" were considered important in daily life with the highest selection rates. A five-factor solution for 25 items with a selection rate greater than 4.5% was obtained by an oblique rotated principal components analysis: "health and disability", "social environment and activity", "socio-economic condition", "emotional stability in marital and family life" and "social intercourse and companionship". These factors appeared to be the fundamental framework of the subjective domain of health-related quality of life of elderly persons living at home.
Hachisuka et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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