Objectives: The main goal of this research project was to
translate and adapt the European Survey on Ageing Protocol
(ESAP) to 7 European countries/cultures. This article
presents preliminary results from the ESAP, the basic
assessment instrument of EXCELSA (European Longitudinal
Study of Aging). Methods: 672 individuals aged 30–
85, selected through quota sampling (by age, gender,
education and living conditions), participated in this
study, with 96 subjects from each of the 7 European countries.
The basic research protocol for assessing competence
and its determinants was designed to be administered
in a 90-min in-home face-to-face interview. It contains
a series of questions, instruments, scales and physical
tests assessing social relationships and caregiving,
mental abilities, well-being, personality, mastery and perceived
control, self-reported health, lifestyles, anthropometry,
biobehavioral measures and sociodemographic
variables. Results: 84% of ESAP measures are agedependent
and 75% of them discriminate between education
levels. Minor differences were found due to gender,
and between people living in rural and urban areas.
Exploratory factor analysis yielded 10 factors accounting
for 67.85% of total variance, one of which was identified
as cognitive and physical ‘competence’. This factorial
structure was tested across countries through concordance
coefficients. Finally, using structural equation modeling,
our data were fitted into a model of competence.
When the sample was split into younger groups (aged
30–49 years) and older ones (50 and more years), the
same model was appropriate for our data. Discussion:
The results are discussed in accordance with other findings
on psychosocial, biophysical and sociodemographic
components of competence, and also in accordance with
theories on competence and successful aging
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