Journal
GERONTOLOGIST
Volume 40, Issue 2, Pages 137-146Publisher
GERONTOLOGICAL SOCIETY AMER
DOI: 10.1093/geront/40.2.137
Keywords
trajectories; transitions; functional limitations; health status; older adults
Categories
Funding
- NIA NIH HHS [R37 AG09692] Funding Source: Medline
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Functional limitation has received considerable attention in gerontology and geriatrics. Much of this work has focused on single-wave transitions devoid of context rather than on the pattern of transitions over time that constitute trajectories. This Forum article suggests that it is time for a different way of looking at functional limitation pathways. It focuses on trajectories. Responses to three Rosow and Breslau (1966) and two Nagi (1976) items, asked of 12,998 older adults who participated in up to seven waves of data collection as part of the Established Populations for the Epidemiologic Study of the Elderly, are used to illustrate this approach, emphasizing both its conceptual and pragmatic advantages. The results provide greater clarity in terms of those who become functionally limited, take on more functional limitations, or recover as well as those who are likely to be lost to follow-up and in terms of the outcomes associated with those individuals over time.
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