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What might influence the elderly willingness to participate in “shared elderly care”? A mixed methods study
by
Qi, Yifan
, Zhang, Jing
, Zhao, Zilin
, Wan, Hejia
, Qin, Yuanmei
, Li, Xinghui
, Xiang, Tianyue
in
Activities of daily living
/ age-friendly technology
/ Aging
/ aging society
/ Algorithms
/ Behavior
/ Data collection
/ e-health literacy
/ Elder care
/ Health care
/ Health education
/ Health literacy
/ Machine learning
/ Older people
/ Population
/ Quality of life
/ Questionnaires
/ Regression analysis
/ resource allocation
/ shared elderly care
2025
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What might influence the elderly willingness to participate in “shared elderly care”? A mixed methods study
by
Qi, Yifan
, Zhang, Jing
, Zhao, Zilin
, Wan, Hejia
, Qin, Yuanmei
, Li, Xinghui
, Xiang, Tianyue
in
Activities of daily living
/ age-friendly technology
/ Aging
/ aging society
/ Algorithms
/ Behavior
/ Data collection
/ e-health literacy
/ Elder care
/ Health care
/ Health education
/ Health literacy
/ Machine learning
/ Older people
/ Population
/ Quality of life
/ Questionnaires
/ Regression analysis
/ resource allocation
/ shared elderly care
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
What might influence the elderly willingness to participate in “shared elderly care”? A mixed methods study
by
Qi, Yifan
, Zhang, Jing
, Zhao, Zilin
, Wan, Hejia
, Qin, Yuanmei
, Li, Xinghui
, Xiang, Tianyue
in
Activities of daily living
/ age-friendly technology
/ Aging
/ aging society
/ Algorithms
/ Behavior
/ Data collection
/ e-health literacy
/ Elder care
/ Health care
/ Health education
/ Health literacy
/ Machine learning
/ Older people
/ Population
/ Quality of life
/ Questionnaires
/ Regression analysis
/ resource allocation
/ shared elderly care
2025
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What might influence the elderly willingness to participate in “shared elderly care”? A mixed methods study
Journal Article
What might influence the elderly willingness to participate in “shared elderly care”? A mixed methods study
2025
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Overview
This study aimed to explore the core factors influencing participation in the \"shared elderly care\" model among urban Chinese seniors and propose targeted solutions to address the challenges of an aging society.
A mixed-methods study was conducted. A questionnaire survey was conducted among 533 seniors in Zhengzhou. Data on demographic characteristics, health literacy, and environmental factors were analyzed using four machine learning algorithms: logistic regression, random forest, K-nearest neighbor, and support vector machine. Approximately 3 years later, qualitative validation was conducted through six focus group interviews. Themes were extracted using Colaizzi phenomenological analysis, and the predictions were validated.
Five hundred valid questionnaires were collected. The machine learning algorithm results showed that the random forest model had the best predictive performance (AUC = 0.652), revealing that e-health literacy and policy awareness were key drivers (jointly explaining 24.1% of the variance in participation intention), with age, environmental sensitivity, and social influence as significant cofactors. Qualitative analysis confirmed that technology usability and a sense of social belonging were core experiential elements of deep participation.
Addressing the primary obstacles of digital literacy gaps and limited technological accessibility, we propose three countermeasures: increasing publicity and promotion of shared elderly care models; conducting community digital health literacy training; and increasing resource allocation to precisely match needs, thus providing an implementation path for building an inclusive shared elderly care ecosystem.
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