1. DEMOGRAPHIC AND ECONOMIC CORRELATES OF HEALTH IN OLD AGE.
- Author
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Smith, James P. and Kington, Raynard
- Subjects
OLDER people ,MEDICAL care ,SOCIAL science research ,GENDER ,ETHNICITY - Abstract
This article examines demographic and economic correlates of functional health among older people in the United States using an important new survey, the Asset and Health Dynamics (AHEAD). AHEAD places equal emphasis on high quality measurement of three life domains required for this research, health, economic status and demographic structure. A central question that researchers address in this paper involves the extent to which the demographic and economic differences that exist among older people account for functional health disparities by gender, by race and by ethnicity. In this paper, researchers examine an important aspect of health during old age, the extent of functional limitations. Because it measures the ability to perform a range of tasks necessary to take care of one's self and one's family, functional status is a particularly relevant health outcome at older ages. The interactive impact of older people's multiple chronic conditions on health is not proxied simply by disease prevalence and severity. Functional status also captures a critical dimension of the ability to live independently in the community, especially with increasing risks for disabling chronic diseases. Finally, functional status is an useful index of the need for assistance that must be provided by family, friends or government programs.
- Published
- 1997
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