Understanding Transportation difficulty Among older adults in Ghana from the Perspective of World Health Organisation’s Healthy Ageing framework: Lessons for Improving Social Work Practice with Older Adults

Author:

Awuviry-Newton Kofi1ORCID,Ofori-Dua Kwadwo2,Newton Abraham3

Affiliation:

1. Priority Research Centre for Generational Health and Ageing, School of Medicine and Health, The University of Newcastle, Australia

2. Department of Sociology and Social Work, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana

3. Department of Social Studies, University of Cape Coast, Central, Ghana

Abstract

Abstract Social work profession can be useful in addressing the transportation needs of older adults. However, there is a paucity of knowledge concerning this need in Ghana. The purpose of the study was to investigate the factors relating to transportation difficulty among older adults in Ghana, employing the World Health Organisation (WHO) Healthy Ageing framework. The implications of the findings on social work practice with older adults in Ghana are herein discussed. Data for 5,107 adults aged fifty years or more came from the WHO Study on global AGEing and adult health Ghana Wave 1. Transportation difficulty was assessed using the self-reported question. In the last thirty days, how much difficulty did you have with getting to where you want to go using private or public transport if needed?” Logistic regression tested associations between transportation difficulty and other independent variables. About 31 per cent of the participants, mostly women (54.7 per cent), experienced transportation difficulty. Associated factors included (not exhaustive) advanced age, lower household income, chronic diseases and lack of trust for others. A high prevalence of transportation difficulty exists among older adults in Ghana and is holistically related. Social work’s intervention to address the transportation needs of older adults in Ghana should be holistic; incorporating the significant factors identified affecting older adults’ well-being.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Health (social science)

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