1. Development of a healthy ageing index in Latin American countries - a 10/66 dementia research group population-based study.
- Author
-
Daskalopoulou, Christina, Chua, Kia-Chong, Koukounari, Artemis, Caballero, Francisco Félix, Prince, Martin, and Prina, A. Matthew
- Subjects
RESEARCH teams ,LATIN Americans ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,WATERSHEDS ,DEMENTIA ,DIAGNOSIS of dementia ,RESEARCH ,PREDICTIVE tests ,SELF-evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,HEALTH status indicators ,DISEASE incidence ,EVALUATION research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,INCOME ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,RESEARCH funding ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models - Abstract
Background: Our population is ageing and in 2050 more than one out of five people will be 60 years or older; 80% of whom will be living in a low-and-middle income country. Living longer does not entail living healthier; however, there is not a widely accepted measure of healthy ageing hampering policy and research. The World Health Organization defines healthy ageing as the process of developing and maintaining functional ability that will enable well-being in older age. We aimed to create a healthy ageing index (HAI) in a subset of six low-and-middle income countries, part of the 10/66 study, by using items of functional ability and intrinsic capacity.Methods: The study sample included residents 65-years old and over (n = 12,865) from catchment area sites in Cuba, Dominican Republic, Peru, Venezuela, Mexico and Puerto Rico. Items were collected by interviewing participants or key informants between 2003 and 2010. Two-stage factor analysis was employed and we compared one-factor, second-order and bifactor models. The psychometric properties of the index, including reliability, replicability, unidimensionality and concurrent convergent validity as well as measurement invariance per ethnic group and gender were further examined in the best fit model.Results: The bifactor model displayed superior model fit statistics supporting that a general factor underlies the various items but other subdomain factors are also needed. The HAI indicated excellent reliability (ω = 0.96, ωΗ = 0.84), replicability (H = 0.96), some support for unidimensionality (Explained Common Variance = 0.65) and some concurrent convergent validity with self-rated health. Scalar measurement invariance per ethnic group and gender was supported.Conclusions: A HAI with excellent psychometric properties was created by using items of functional ability and intrinsic capacity in a subset of six low-and-middle income countries. Further research is needed to explore sub-population differences and to validate this index to other cultural settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF