Black/White Differences in Health Status and Mortality Among the Elderly

Author:

Berkman Lisa1,Singer Burton1,Manton Kenneth2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale University, 60 College Street, New Haven, Connecticut 06510

2. Center for Demographic Studies, Duke University, 2217 Campus Drive, Durham, North Carolina 27706

Abstract

Abstract Grade of membership (GOM) representations are used to characterize and compare the health status of a very heterogeneous sample of blacks and whites in an elderly cohort of 2,806 noninstitutionalized men and women living in New Haven, Connecticut. They were interviewed in 1982 as part of the Established Populations for the Epidemiologic Study of the Elderly (EPESE). Ideal profiles based on functional disabilities, chronic diseases, and selected biomedical and behavioral risk factors are constructed empirically. Each individual in the sample is represented by a set of GOM scores, interpreted as degrees of similarity of his or her health record to each of the profiles. Four profiles emerge from GOM analyses: healthy elderly, elderly with cognitive impairment, elderly with impairment in mobility function and physical performance and with selected chronic conditions, and elderly with major limitations in activities of daily living and multiple chronic conditions. Although elderly blacks and whites generally have similar configurations of profiles, there are important differences, especially when chronic conditions are related to specific types of functional impairments. Questions about and claims for black/white mortality crossovers at older ages, usually addressed with aggregate data, are examined conditional on GOM scores that correspond to diverse combinations of disabilities (or lack thereof) together with housing characteristics of cohort members (e.g., whether they live in public housing for the elderly or in owned or rented housing in the community).

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference24 articles.

1. Assessing the physical health effects of social networks and social support;Berkman;Annual Review of Public Health,1984

2. Depressive symptoms in relation to physical health and functioning in the elderly;Berkman;American Journal of Epidemiology,1986

3. Social networks, host resistance, and mortality: A nine year follow-up study of Alameda County residents;Berkman;American journal of Epidemiology,1979

4. A prospective study of functional status among community elders;Branch;American Journal of Public Health,1984

5. A comparison of eight models;Bush,1959

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