Monitoring population disability: evaluation of a new Global Activity Limitation Indicator (GALI) |
| |
Authors: | van Oyen Herman Van der Heyden Johan Perenboom Rom Jagger Carol |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Unit of Epidemiology, Scientific Institute of Public Health, J. Wytsmanstraat 14, 1050 Brussels, Belgium;(2) TNO-Prevention and Health, Leiden, the Netherlands;(3) Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK |
| |
Abstract: | Summary. Objective To evaluate a single item instrument, the Global Activity Limitation Indicator (GALI), to measure long-standing health related activity limitations, against several health indicators: a composite morbidity indicator, instruments measuring mental health (SCL-90R, GHQ-12), physical co-morbidity and physical limitations (ADLs, SF-36). Methods Cross-sectional data (n = 9168) of the 2001-National Health Interview Survey in Belgium was used to compare the GALI with other health indicators across gender, age, educational attainment and language. Results Responses to the GALI were similar to responses to other indicators of physical limitations (Limitations in Activities of Daily Living (by severity or by number of limitations), the SF-36 physical domain), to an indicator of chronic physical comorbidity and to indicators of mental health. The probability of reporting absence of long-standing activity limitation with the GALI was high in subjects without physical limitations or physical or mental conditions. This probability decreased as the severity or number of limitations, the number of physical or mental conditions increased. Conclusions The GALI performs appropriately against other health indicators and appears to refl ect long-standing activity limitation associated with both mental and physical conditions. Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available to authorised users in the online version of this article at . Submitted: 14 March 2005 Accepted: 28 February 2006 |
| |
Keywords: | Disability Activity restriction Global indicator |
本文献已被 PubMed SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|