Research paper
Ageing, loneliness, and the geographic distribution of New Zealand's interRAI-HC cohort
About this item
- Title
- Ageing, loneliness, and the geographic distribution of New Zealand's interRAI-HC cohort
- Content partner
- University of Otago
- Collection
- Otago University Research Archive
- Description
Loneliness is a significant negative predictor of ageing well and a contra-indicator for resilience against requiring long-term residential care. Health geographers can contribute to the loneliness and ageing literature through examining how exposures in the physical and social landscape can affect positive and negative health outcomes. As well as improving individual experiences of ageing, spatial analysis may help to contribute to better understandings of loneliness and help reduce the $1.7...
- Format
- Research paper
- Research format
- Scholarly text / Journal article
- Thesis level
- Article
- Date created
- 2019
- Creator
- Beere, P. / Keeling, S. / Jamieson, H.
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/10523/16100
- Related subjects
- aged / aged, 80 and over / aging / ethnology / cohort studies / ethnic groups / psychology / statistics / loneliness / New Zealand / risk factors / rural population / social class / urban population / ethnicity / rural / socioeconomic status
What can I do with this item?
Check copyright status and what you can do with this item
Check informationReport this item
If you believe this item breaches our terms of use please report this item
Report this itemDigitalNZ brings together more than 30 million items from institutions so that they are easy to find and use. This information is the best information we could find on this item. This item was added on 03 May 2024, and updated 09 December 2024.
Learn more about how we work.
Share
What is the copyright status of this item?

All Rights Reserved
This item is all rights reserved, which means you'll have to get permission from University of Otago before using it.

More Information
University of Otago has this to say about the rights status of this item:
All items in OUR Archive are provided for research purposes and private study and are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.
What can I do with this item?
You must always check with University of Otago to confirm the specific terms of use, but this is our understanding:

Non-infringing use
NZ Copyright law does not prevent every use of a copyright work. You should consider what you can and cannot do with a copyright work.

No sharing
You may not copy and/or share this item with others without further permission. This includes posting it on your blog, using it in a presentation, or any other public use.

No modifying
You are not allowed to adapt or remix this item into any other works.

No commercial use
You may not use this item commercially.
What can I do with this item?
Check copyright status and what you can do with this item
Check informationReport this item
If you believe this item breaches our terms of use please report this item
Report this itemDigitalNZ brings together more than 30 million items from institutions so that they are easy to find and use. This information is the best information we could find on this item. This item was added on 03 May 2024, and updated 09 December 2024.
Learn more about how we work.
Share
Related items
Loading...