Middle-Aged Americans report more
Mobility-Related Disabilities
Newswise — The proportion of older
middle-aged Americans who report
disabilities related to mobility increased
significantly from 1997 to 2007, in contrast
to the disability decline that has been
found among Americans ages 65 and over,
according to a new study by the RAND
Corporation and the University of Michigan.
Researchers found a rise in the proportion
of Americans aged 50 to 64 who reported
mobility-related difficulties or the need
for help in daily personal care activities
such as getting out of bed, according
findings published in the April 6 edition of
the journal Health
Affairs.
The reason for the increase is not clear,
although many of those reporting
disabilities say they are due to health
problems that began in their 30s and 40s.
"Although the overall rate of needing help
with personal care among this group remains
very low---less than 2 percent---this rise
in disability is reason for concern," said
Linda Martin, the study's lead author and a
senior fellow at RAND, a nonprofit research
organization.
"It does not bode well for future trends for
the 65 and older population, plus there are
substantial personal and societal costs of
caring for people of any age who need help."
Researchers examined disability trends among
people aged 50 to 64 by analyzing
information from the 1997 to 2007 National
Health Interview Survey, a nationally
representative effort that asks thousands of
community-dwelling Americans each year about
a broad range of issues regarding their
health status.
More than 40 percent of people aged 50 to 64
reported that because of a health problem
they had difficulty with at least one of
nine physical functions and many reported
problems with more than one.
Over
the study period, researchers noted a
significant increase in the number of people
reporting that a health problem made it
difficult for them to stoop, stand for two
hours, walk a quarter mile or climb 10 steps
without resting.
There also was a significant increase in the
proportion of people who reported needing
help with personal care activities of daily
living such as getting in or out of bed or
getting around inside their homes.
"This is a disappointing trend with
potentially far-reaching and long-term
negative consequences," said Richard Suzman,
director of the Division of Behavioral and
Social Research at the National Institute on
Aging, which funded the study.
"If people have such difficulties in middle
age, how can we expect that this age
group---today's baby boomers---will be able
to take care of itself with advancing age?
If it continues, this trend could have a
significant effect on the need for long-term
care in the future."
From 1997 to 2007, increasing proportions of
people aged 50 to 64 attributed their need
for help to back or neck problems, diabetes,
and depression, anxiety or emotional
problems.
By 2005-07, the four most common causes for
needing help were these three plus arthritis
or rheumatism. People who reported these
conditions as causes were most likely to
report that the ailments started at ages 30
to 49 years.
The reported increases in conditions causing
disability may reflect real deterioration of
health or improved awareness of conditions
as a result of diagnosis and treatment.
It also could be that improved medical care
has extended the lives of people whose
disabilities began early in life and who
might have not survived to age 50 in earlier
decades.
Despite continuing concerns about obesity in
the United States, those needing help did
not cite obesity as an important cause of
their limitations.
"We have this uptick of people in their 50s
and early 60s who say they need help with
their daily activities of living and we're
not sure why," said study co-author Vicki
Freedman, a research professor at the
Institute for Social Research at U-M.
"But the patterns suggest the need for
prevention and early intervention before the
age of Medicare eligibility."
Other authors of the study are Robert
Schoeni and Patricia Andreski of the
Institute for Social Research (ISR).
RAND Health, a division of the RAND
Corporation, is the nation's largest
independent health policy research program,
with a broad research portfolio that focuses
on quality, costs and health services
delivery, among other topics.
The University of Michigan Institute for
Social Research is the world's largest
academic social science survey and research
organization, and a world leader in
developing and applying social science
methodology, and in educating researchers
and students from around the world.
Established in 1949, ISR conducts some of
the most widely cited studies in the nation,
including the Thomson Reuters/University of
Michigan Survey of Consumer Attitudes, the
American National Election Studies, the
Monitoring the Future Study, the Panel Study
of Income Dynamics, the Health and
Retirement Study, the Columbia County
Longitudinal Study and the National Survey
of Black Americans. ISR researchers also
collaborate with social scientists in more
than 60 nations on the World Values Surveys
and other projects, and the Institute has
established formal ties with universities in
Poland, China, and South Africa. ISR is also
home to the Inter-University Consortium for
Political and Social Research (ICPSR), the
world's largest digital social science data
archive. Visit the ISR Web site athttp://www.isr.umich.edu for
more information.
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