Health and disability – a multi-group latent class analysis of the World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 among those with mental and physical health conditions
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Published:2024-07-27
Issue:1
Volume:22
Page:
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ISSN:1477-7525
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Container-title:Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Health Qual Life Outcomes
Author:
Seet Vanessa,Abdin Edimansyah,Jeyagurunathan Anitha,Chik Tan Sing,Kit Lum Joon,Sing Lee Eng,Verma Swapna,Ker-Chiah Wei,Ng Pamela,Subramaniam Mythily
Abstract
Abstract
Background
This study aims to identify disability classes among people with schizophrenia spectrum disorder, depression, anxiety or diabetes via the WHODAS 2.0; investigate the invariance of disability patterns among the four diagnostic groups; and examine associations between disability classes and sociodemographic variables.
Methods
Patients seeking treatment for schizophrenia spectrum disorder, depression, anxiety or diabetes (n=1076) were recruited. Latent class analysis was used to identify disability classes based on WHODAS 2.0 responses. Measurement invariance was tested using multi-group latent class analysis. Associations between classes and sociodemographic variables were tested via multinomial logistic regression.
Results
A five-class solution was identified; examination of model invariance showed that the partially constrained five-class model was most appropriate, suggesting that class structure was consistent while class membership differed across diagnostic groups. Finally, significant associations were found between class membership and ethnicity, education level, and employment status.
Conclusions
The results show the feasibility of using the WHODAS 2.0 to identify and compare different disability classes among people with mental or physical conditions and their sociodemographic correlates. Establishing a typology of different disability profiles will help guide research and treatment plans that tackle not just clinical but also functional aspects of living with either a chronic psychiatric or physical condition.
Funder
Singapore Ministry of Health’s National Medical Research Council
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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