Recovery from physical limitations among older Mexican adults

•Population studies show that partial or full recovery from disability is possible.•Mexican adults aged 60+ show both improvement and decline in physical function with the majority showing mobility problems.•Recovery in the 2001-2003 sample is 21% and in the 2012-2015 sample is 18%.•Research on reco...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of gerontology and geriatrics 2020-11, Vol.91, p.104208-104208, Article 104208
Hauptverfasser: Díaz-Venegas, Carlos, Wong, Rebeca
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Wong, Rebeca
description •Population studies show that partial or full recovery from disability is possible.•Mexican adults aged 60+ show both improvement and decline in physical function with the majority showing mobility problems.•Recovery in the 2001-2003 sample is 21% and in the 2012-2015 sample is 18%.•Research on recovery should include all dimensions of physical function.•Treatment of chronic diseases may play a critical role in disability recovery. This paper examines the key determinants of the likelihood of recovery from a physical disability among older adults. Data come from the Mexican Health and Aging Study (MHAS), a national sample of adults born in 1951 or earlier, including a baseline survey in 2001 and follow-ups in 2003, 2012 and 2015. At baseline, we divided our sample of older adults aged 60+ by dimensions of physical limitations (ADLs, IADLs, mobility) and classified respondents as having physical limitations in zero, one, two or three dimensions. Each respondent was then categorized as “same”, “worse”, “improved” or “died” depending on the number of physical dimensions with a limitation in a 2-year span (2001–2003) and again, separately, in a 3-year span (2012–2015). We then used a multinomial logistic regression to analyze the relative risk of transitioning from one category to another. Around 21 % of our sample exhibited some recovery in 2003 and around 20 % recovered in 2015. Age, gender, poor self-rated health, depression and some chronic conditions were significant for shifting the relative risk from staying the same to getting worse, dying or even improving. Disability from a physical limitation is a reversible and dynamic process. Our results reflect the importance of considering the dimensions of physical ability while analyzing recovery, and illustrate that the presence of a chronic condition or depressive symptoms does not necessarily imply permanent disability.
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This paper examines the key determinants of the likelihood of recovery from a physical disability among older adults. Data come from the Mexican Health and Aging Study (MHAS), a national sample of adults born in 1951 or earlier, including a baseline survey in 2001 and follow-ups in 2003, 2012 and 2015. At baseline, we divided our sample of older adults aged 60+ by dimensions of physical limitations (ADLs, IADLs, mobility) and classified respondents as having physical limitations in zero, one, two or three dimensions. Each respondent was then categorized as “same”, “worse”, “improved” or “died” depending on the number of physical dimensions with a limitation in a 2-year span (2001–2003) and again, separately, in a 3-year span (2012–2015). We then used a multinomial logistic regression to analyze the relative risk of transitioning from one category to another. Around 21 % of our sample exhibited some recovery in 2003 and around 20 % recovered in 2015. 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This paper examines the key determinants of the likelihood of recovery from a physical disability among older adults. Data come from the Mexican Health and Aging Study (MHAS), a national sample of adults born in 1951 or earlier, including a baseline survey in 2001 and follow-ups in 2003, 2012 and 2015. At baseline, we divided our sample of older adults aged 60+ by dimensions of physical limitations (ADLs, IADLs, mobility) and classified respondents as having physical limitations in zero, one, two or three dimensions. Each respondent was then categorized as “same”, “worse”, “improved” or “died” depending on the number of physical dimensions with a limitation in a 2-year span (2001–2003) and again, separately, in a 3-year span (2012–2015). We then used a multinomial logistic regression to analyze the relative risk of transitioning from one category to another. Around 21 % of our sample exhibited some recovery in 2003 and around 20 % recovered in 2015. 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subjects Disability
Mexico
MHAS
Older adults
Physical limitations
Recovery
title Recovery from physical limitations among older Mexican adults
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