4.5 Article

Sex-stratified reference values for the life-space assessment in the Canadian longitudinal study on aging

Journal

AGING CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 35, Issue 5, Pages 1073-1080

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s40520-023-02382-2

Keywords

CLSA; Life-space mobility; Population data; Normative data

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This study aimed to establish sex-stratified reference values for the Life-Space Assessment (LSA) in middle-aged and older Canadians, which will aid in interpreting and comparing LSA scores obtained in clinical and research settings for Canadian adults.
BackgroundThe Life-Space Assessment (LSA) can compliment traditional physical performance measures of mobility by accounting for the interaction between individuals and their environment. However, there are no studies that have generated percentile curves showing sex-stratified reference values in a large population-based sample of community-dwelling adults, making its interpretation difficult. Therefore, this study aimed to establish sex-stratified reference values for the LSA in middle-aged and older Canadians.MethodsBaseline data for participants aged 45-84 years old from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA) were used (n = 22,154). Quantile regression was used to estimate specific percentiles, with age as the independent variable and LSA scores as the dependent variable. Models were run for the whole sample, then separately for males and females. The models were cross-validated to assess their reliability. CLSA inflation and analytic weights were applied.ResultsOn average, the sample was 62.5 +/- 10.0 y.o. (51.1% males), with a weighted mean LSA score of 89.2 +/- 17.0. There was also a decrease in LSA scores with age, where scores were lower for older age groups compared to younger groups, and LSA scores were lower for females relative to males.Discussion and conclusionsReference data will aid in interpreting, comparing, and making inferences related to LSA scores obtained in clinical and research settings for Canadian adults.

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