1 / 9

Self-Care Question: Cognitive Testing Results

Self-Care Question: Cognitive Testing Results. 6 th Annual Mtg UN Washington Group on Disability Statistics Kampala, Uganda October 10-13, 2006. Self- Care Question . Do you have difficulty with self-care, such as washing all over or dressing? No, no difficulty Yes, some difficulty

skaggsd
Download Presentation

Self-Care Question: Cognitive Testing Results

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Self-Care Question:Cognitive Testing Results 6th Annual Mtg UN Washington Group on Disability Statistics Kampala, Uganda October 10-13, 2006

  2. Self- Care Question • Do you have difficulty with self-care, such as washing all over or dressing? • No, no difficulty • Yes, some difficulty • Yes, a lot of difficulty • Can not do at all

  3. More detailed functioning questions • By yourself and not using aids, do you have any difficulty… • Reaching up over your head? • Reaching out as if to shake someone’s hand? • Using your fingers to button a shirt or dress? • Putting on socks or stocking? • Tying your shoelaces? • Combing your hair? • Feeding yourself • Response categories: Yes/No

  4. Pattern Responses • Non-Problematic • No disability (based on main question) and no functional problems • Disability and at least three functional problems • Problematic • Disability, but no functional problems reported • No disability, but three or more functional difficulties reported

  5. Pattern Responses (continued) • Borderline • No disability (based on main question) but 1 or 2 functional problems reported • Disability but 1 or 2 functional problems reported • Why is this borderline and not problematic? • Because 1 or 2 functional problems may or may not create a situation where a person has difficulty with self care – more of an issue because of Yes/No response categories

  6. Overall Distribution of Answers by Disability Threshold • Disability defined as ANY difficulty • Non-Problematic – 81.0% • Problematic – 9.5% • Borderline – 9.5% • Disability defined as “A lot” or “Cannot do” • Non-Problematic – 80.5% • Problematic – 11.1% • Borderline – 8.4%

  7. Lower Disability Threshold: problem responses (red) are younger, borderline (blue) are younger for “non-disabled” with 1 functional problem

  8. Higher Disability Threshold: problem responses (red) and borderline (blue) non-disabled tend to be older

  9. Questions: Why do people ended up in the borderline and problem responses? -- because they belong there, because of ambiguity in the questions, some misinterpretation? For example, in the Vietnam report they mentioned that some people were confused by the self-care question because they weren't sure if it was asking if they ACTUALLY cared for themselves or if they had the ABILITY to. Or, the self-care question had two examples (washing and dressing) and some respondents weren't sure if the question meant ONLY those activities, and not necessarily things. Why might cross-country differences exist? Translation, interviewer training, sample selection, cultural differences, living conditions?

More Related