The authors have successfully applied five ADL items selected and culturally adapted from Older Americans Resources and Services to the study of older Chinese. A consistent and reliable estimate of functional dependence among older persons is obtained. The prevalence of dementia and many self-reported illness, as well as the ADL status by medical condition, are reported. The findings reveal certain patterns of relationship between illness conditions and ADL performance.
This study reports the methods and initial findings of the first longitudinal study of Alzheimer's disease and dementia in China. A probability sample of 5,055 noninstitutionalized elderly persons in Shanghai was tested directly during the first phase of the study using a Chinese version of the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). Details of sampling design and data collection procedures are described. Overall, some 4.1 percent of adults 55 years or older may be classified as having severe cognitive impairment, and 14.4 percent are mild cases. The rates for females are higher than for males by a ratio of 3.75 in the severe category, and 2.6 in the mild group. Within each age group, cognitive impairment rates vary by education. Multiple logistic regression was used to examine, within each age group, the nature of the association between the presence of a cognitive impairment and educational level controlling for sex. The results showed that educational attainment has a highly significant inverse relationship with prevalence of cognitive impairments (severe vs others). On the other hand, when educational attainment was controlled for in the logistic regression model, sex was significantly associated with prevalence of cognitive disorders for the age groups 65-74 and 75 years or older, but not for the group 55-64 years. These findings suggest the impact that basic educational deficits have on human cognitive functioning as measured through tests like the MMSE. Cross-tabulations of impairment rates according to marital status, economic status, and health-related problems are also presented.
Studies of the elderly worldwide over the last 3 decades have reported that a self-rating of "poor" compared with "excellent/good" health increases the relative risk of dying. The authors tested the strength of this association by performing age-stratified Cox regression analyses on a 5-year longitudinal study of a representative sample of noninstitutionalized elderly aged 65 years and older (n=3,094) in a district of Shanghai, China. More than 20 potential confounders that were only partially controlled in other studies and threats to response validity due to cognitive impairment or diagnosed dementia that were not considered in previous studies were taken into account in this analysis. The results showed that among those aged 65-74 years, "poor" perceived health increases the adjusted relative risk of death by 1.93 (95% confidence interval 1.20-3.11) compared with "excellent/good" health. The adjusted relative risk of a "fair" rating of health is 2.16 (95% confidence interval 1.44-3.25). In the older age group, mortality risks for the ratings of fair as well as poor compared with excellent/good health were not statistically significant. The authors posit that several mechanisms related to host vulnerability markers and greater-than-expected utilization of health services may explain the association between self-assessed health and mortality risks. Future research should strive to develop more precise measures of these and related variables.
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