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Volume 88, Issue 9, Pages 1217-1220 (September 2007)


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Compensatory Strategies Used by Older Adults Facing Mobility Disability

Carlos O. Weiss, MD, MHSabCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Helen M. Hoenig, MD, MPHcd, Linda P. Fried, MD, MPHab

Refers to article:
Construct and Predictive Validity of a Self-Reported Measure of Preclinical Mobility Limitation
Minna Mänty, Ari Heinonen, Raija Leinonen, Timo Törmäkangas, Ritva Sakari-Rantala, Mirja Hirvensalo, Mikaela B. von Bonsdorff, Taina Rantanen
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
September 2007 (Vol. 88, Issue 9, Pages 1108-1113)
Abstract | Full Text | Full-Text PDF (170 KB)

Abstract 

Weiss CO, Hoenig HM, Fried LP. Compensatory strategies used by older adults facing mobility disability.

Preclinical disability in mobility tasks can be recognized by asking people without overt mobility disability whether they have changed the way, either the manner or the frequency, of doing a mobility task because of a health or physical condition. Like other compensatory strategies, preclinical mobility disability has a dual nature as both a risk marker associated with impairment or limitation and a mediating factor affecting the natural history of disability. The method of ascertaining preclinical disability through self-report has been shown to have construct validity, to be reliable, and to identify people at an elevated risk of developing overt mobility disability over 1 to 2 years. Many worthy research questions in this field remain to be addressed, especially regarding qualitative heterogeneity (doing more vs doing less) and interactions among compensatory strategies. Nonetheless, there is sufficient evidence to apply what is known about preclinical disability to screening in clinical settings. This area of research and practice constitutes an opportunity for physical medicine and rehabilitation and geriatric medicine to jointly make a large beneficial impact on population health through strategies to prevent disability because rapidly growing numbers of older adults will experience this early and potentially malleable stage.

a Division of Geriatric Medicine & Gerontology, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD

b Center on Aging and Health, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD

c Department of Medicine/Geriatrics, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC

d Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Service, Durham Veterans Administration Medical Center, Durham, NC.

Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to Carlos O. Weiss, MD, MHS, Div of Geriatric Medicine, Mason F. Lord, West Tower, # 711, Baltimore, MD 21224-2734. Reprints are not available from the authors.

 See original article, p 1108.

 Supported in part by the National Institutes of Disability and Rehabilitation Research, RERC on Wheeled Mobility (grant no. H133E030035-04).

 No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit upon the author(s) or upon any organization with which the author(s) is/are associated.

PII: S0003-9993(07)01261-0

doi:10.1016/j.apmr.2007.07.007


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