TY - JOUR
T1 - Inner city, middle-aged African Americans have excess frank and subclinical disability
AU - Miller, Douglas K.
AU - Wolinsky, Fredric D.
AU - Malmstrom, Theodore K.
AU - Andresen, Elena M.
AU - Miller, J. Philip
N1 - Funding Information:
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Supported by grant RO1 AG10436 from the National Institute on Aging.
Funding Information:
Notes: *All data weighted to the represented population. The Health and Retirement Study is a Cooperative Agreement between the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan and the National Institute on Aging. Financial support for the project is provided by the National Institute on Aging, with supplementary funding provided by the Social Security Administration. †National sample data are from the 2000 interviews of the Health and Retirement Study and War Baby Cohort. zAdjusted odds ratios controlling for age and sex. §p , .001, {p , .05, ††p , .01, comparing African American Health Project samples to African American national sample by chi-squared tests (unadjusted rates); kp , .001, #p , .01, **p , .05, comparing African American Health Samples to non-Hispanic White sample by chi-squared tests (unadjusted rates).
PY - 2005/2
Y1 - 2005/2
N2 - Background. Healthy People 2010 seeks to decrease or eliminate the health disparities experienced by disadvantaged minority groups. Methods. African American Health (AAH) is a population-based panel study of community-dwelling African Americans bom between 1936 and 1950 from two strata. The first encompasses a poor, inner city area, and the second involves a suburban population with higher socioeconomic status. The authors recruited 998 participants (76% recruitment). Frank disability was assessed for 25 tasks and defined as inability or difficulty performing that task. Subclinical disability was assessed for 12 tasks and defined as no difficulty but a change in either manner or frequency of task performance. Frank disability prevalences were compared with national data for community-dwelling non-Hispanic white persons (NHW) and African American persons in the same age range. Results. Compared with the suburban sample, the inner city group had a higher prevalence of frank disability for all 25 tasks (p < .05 for 16) and subclinical disability for 11 of the 12 tasks (p < .05 for 5). Both strata had more frank disability compared with the national NHW population. The inner city area had higher frank disability proportions than did the national African American sample, whereas the suburban group had similar disability levels. Conclusions. The AAH inner city group experiences more frank disability than other populations of African Americans and NHWs. The increased prevalence of subclinical disability in the inner city group compared with the suburban group suggests that the disparity in frank disability will continue. These findings indicate that African Americans living in poor inner city areas in particular need intensive and targeted clinical and public health efforts.
AB - Background. Healthy People 2010 seeks to decrease or eliminate the health disparities experienced by disadvantaged minority groups. Methods. African American Health (AAH) is a population-based panel study of community-dwelling African Americans bom between 1936 and 1950 from two strata. The first encompasses a poor, inner city area, and the second involves a suburban population with higher socioeconomic status. The authors recruited 998 participants (76% recruitment). Frank disability was assessed for 25 tasks and defined as inability or difficulty performing that task. Subclinical disability was assessed for 12 tasks and defined as no difficulty but a change in either manner or frequency of task performance. Frank disability prevalences were compared with national data for community-dwelling non-Hispanic white persons (NHW) and African American persons in the same age range. Results. Compared with the suburban sample, the inner city group had a higher prevalence of frank disability for all 25 tasks (p < .05 for 16) and subclinical disability for 11 of the 12 tasks (p < .05 for 5). Both strata had more frank disability compared with the national NHW population. The inner city area had higher frank disability proportions than did the national African American sample, whereas the suburban group had similar disability levels. Conclusions. The AAH inner city group experiences more frank disability than other populations of African Americans and NHWs. The increased prevalence of subclinical disability in the inner city group compared with the suburban group suggests that the disparity in frank disability will continue. These findings indicate that African Americans living in poor inner city areas in particular need intensive and targeted clinical and public health efforts.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=17144427762&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/gerona/60.2.207
DO - 10.1093/gerona/60.2.207
M3 - Article
C2 - 15814864
AN - SCOPUS:17144427762
SN - 1079-5006
VL - 60
SP - 207
EP - 212
JO - Journals of Gerontology - Series A Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences
JF - Journals of Gerontology - Series A Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences
IS - 2
ER -