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Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 2009. Improving the Measurement of Late-Life Disability in Population Surveys: Beyond ADLs and IADLs: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12740.
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Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 2009. Improving the Measurement of Late-Life Disability in Population Surveys: Beyond ADLs and IADLs: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12740.
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Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 2009. Improving the Measurement of Late-Life Disability in Population Surveys: Beyond ADLs and IADLs: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12740.
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Page 95
Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 2009. Improving the Measurement of Late-Life Disability in Population Surveys: Beyond ADLs and IADLs: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12740.
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Page 96
Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 2009. Improving the Measurement of Late-Life Disability in Population Surveys: Beyond ADLs and IADLs: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12740.
×
Page 97
Suggested Citation:"References." National Research Council. 2009. Improving the Measurement of Late-Life Disability in Population Surveys: Beyond ADLs and IADLs: Summary of a Workshop. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12740.
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94 IMPROVING THE MEASUREMENT OF LATE-LIFE DISABILITY Cocchiarella, L., and Andersson, G. (2001). (Eds.). Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment (5th ed.). Chicago, IL: American Medical Association. Cook, K.F., O’Malley, K.J., and Roddey, T.S. (2005). Dynamic assessment of health outcomes: Time to let the CAT out of the bag? Health Services Research 40(5 Pt 2):1694–1711. Cornoni-Huntley, J.C., Foley, D.J., and Guralnik, J.M. (1991). Co-morbidity analysis: A strategy for understanding mortality, disability and use of health care facilities of older people. International Journal of Epidemiology 20:S8–S17. Coster, W.J., Haley, S.M., Ludlow, L.H., Andres, P.L., and Ni, P.S. (2004). Development of an applied cognition scale to measure rehabilitation outcomes. Archives of Physical Medi- cine and Rehabilitation 85(12):2030–2035. Couper, M., Kapteyn, A., Schonlau, M., and Winter, J. (2007). Noncoverage and nonresponse in an Internet survey. Social Science Research 36(1):131–148. Crimmins, E.M., Saito, Y., and Reynolds, S. (1997). Further evidence on recent trends in the prevalence and incidence of disability among older Americans from two sources: The LSOA and the NHIS. Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences 52B(2):S59–S71. De Ayala, R.J. (1993). Methods, plainly speaking: An introduction to polytomous item re- sponse theory models. Measurement and Evaluation in Counseling and Development 25:172–189. Di Carlo, A., Baldereschi, M., Amaducci, L., Maggi, S., Grigoletto, F., Scarlato, G., and Inzitari, D. (2000). Cognitive impairment without dementia in older people: Prevalence, vascular risk factors, impact on disability: The Italian Longitudinal Study on Aging. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 48(7):775–782. Donovan, N.J., Kendall, D.L., Heaton, S.C., Kwon, S., Velozo, C.A., and Duncan, P.W. (2008). Conceptualizing functional cognition in stroke. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair 22(2):122–135. Ferrucci, L., Guralnik, J.M., Simonsick, E., Salive, M.E., Corti, C., and Langlois, J. (1996). Progressive versus catastrophic disability: A longitudinal view of the disablement process. Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences 51A(3):M123–M130. Freedman, V. (2006). Late-life disability trends: An overview of current evidence. In Institute of Medicine, Workshop on Disability in America: A New Look. M. Field, A.M. Jette, and L. Martin (Eds.). Committee on Disability in America. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. Freedman, V.A., Martin, L.G., and Schoeni, R.F. (2002). Recent trends in disability and functioning among older adults in the United States: A systematic review. Journal of the American Medical Association 288:3137–3146. Freedman, V.A., Crimmins, E., Schoeni, R.F., Spillman, B.C., Aykan, H., Kramarow, E., Land, K., Lubitz, J., Manton, K., Martin, L.G., Shinberg, D., and Waidmann, T. (2004). Resolv- ing inconsistencies in trends in old-age disability: Report from a technical working group. Demography 41(3):417–441. Freedman, V.A., Waidmann, T., and Spillman, B. (2005). Opportunities to Improve Survey Measures of Late-Life Disability: Part II—Workshop Summary. Report submitted to the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, DC. Fried, L.P., and Herdman, S.J. (1992). Geriatric assessment: Multifactorial problems. Physical Therapy Practice 1:88–93. Fried, L.P., Borhani, N.O., Enright, P., Furberg, C.D., Gardin, J.M., Kronmal, R.A., Kuller, L.H., Manolio, T.A., Mittelmark, M.B., Newman, A., O’Leary, D.H., Psaty, B., Rautaha- rju, P., Tracy, R.P., and Weiler, P.G. (1991a). The Cardiovascular Health Study: Design and rationale. Annals of Epidemiology 1:263–276. Fried, L.P., Herdman, S.J., Kuhn, K., Rubin, G., and Turano, K. (1991b). Preclinical disability: Hypotheses about the bottom of the iceberg. Journal of Aging and Health 3:285–300.

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96 IMPROVING THE MEASUREMENT OF LATE-LIFE DISABILITY Kapteyn, A., Smith, J.P., and van Soest, A. (2007). Vignettes and self-reports of work disability in the United States and the Netherlands. American Economic Review 97(1):461–473. Katz, S., and Akpom, C. (1976). A measure of primary sociobiological function. International Journal of Health Services 6:493–508. King, G., Murray, C.J.L., Salomon, J.A., and Tandon, A. (2004). Enhancing the validity of cross-cultural comparability of measurement in survey research. American Political Sci- ence Review 98(1):91–207. Krueger, A., and Stone, A. (2008). Assessment of pain: A community-based diary survey in the USA. Lancet (371):1519–1525. Kumamoto, T., Sannomiya, K., Ueyama, H., Aoki, K., Nakashima, T., Nakamura, R., and Tsuda, T. (2000). Neurological abnormalities in cognitively impaired but not demented elderly. Acta Neurologica Scandinavia 102(5):292–298. Lakdawalla, D.N., Bhattacharya, J., and Goldman, D. (2004). Are the young becoming dis- abled? Health Affairs 23(1):168–176. Lan, T-Y., Melzer, D., Tom, B., and Guralnik, J. (2002). Performance tests and disability: De- veloping an objective index of mobility-related limitation in older populations. Journal of Gerontology, Medical Sciences 57A(5): M294–M301. Lawton, M.P., and Brody, E. (1969). Assessment of older people: Self-maintaining and instru- mental activities of daily living. Gerontologist 9:179–186. Magaziner, J., Bassett, S.S., and Gruber-Baldini, A. (1996). Use of proxies to measure health and functional status in epidemiologic studies of community-dwelling women aged 65 years and older. American Journal of Epidemiology 143(3):283–292. Manton, K.G., and Gu, X. (2001). Changes in the prevalence of chronic disability in the United States black and nonblack population above age 65 from 1982 to 1999. Proceed- ings of the National Academy of Sciences 98(11):6354–6359. Manton, K.G., Corder, L., and Stallard, E. (1997). Chronic disability trends in elderly United States populations: 1982–1994. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 94: 2593–2598. Melzer, D., Lan, T-Y., Tom, B., Deeg, D., and Guralnik, J. (2004). Variation in thresholds for reporting mobility disability between national population subgroups and studies. Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences 59A(12):M1295–M1303. Miller, D.K., Wolinsky, F.D., Malmstrom, T.K., Andresen, E.M., and Miller, J.P. (2005). Inner city, middle-aged African Americans have excess frank and subclinical disability. Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences 60(2):M207–M212. Nagi, S. (1965). Some conceptual issues in disability and rehabilitation. In M. Sussman (Ed.), Sociology and Rehabilitation (pp. 100–113). Washington, DC: American Sociological Association. Nagi. S. (1976). An epidemiology of disability among adults in the United States. Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 54:439–467. Nagi, S. (1991). Disability concepts revisited: Implications for prevention. In Institute of Medi- cine, Disability in America: Toward a National Agenda for Prevention (pp. 309–327). A.M. Pope and A.R. Tarlov (Eds.). Washington, DC: National Academy Press. National Center for Health Statistics. (2009). Health, United States, 2008. Chartbook with Special Feature on the Health of Young Adults. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. National Institute on Aging and National Bureau of Economic Research. (2001). Disability Decline: What We Know and What We’d Like to Know. Workshop Summary. Available: http://www.nia.nih.gov/ResearchInformation/ExtramuralPrograms/BehavioralAndSocial- Research/ConferencesAndWorkshops.htm [accessed February 2009].

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Improving the Measurement of Late-Life Disability in Population Surveys summarizes a workshop organized to draw upon recent advances to improve the measurement of physical and cognitive disability in population surveys of the elderly population. The book questions whether or not the measures of activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily living used in many population surveys are sufficient as the primary survey-based indicators of late-life disability. If not, should they be refined or should they be supplemented by other measures of disability in surveys? If yes, in what ways should disability measures be changed or modified to produce population estimates of late-life disability and to monitor trends? The book also discusses what further research is needed to advance this effort.

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