The Definition and Measurement of Disability - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Definition and Measurement of Disability

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Philippines (1995) 1.3% Developed Countries: Norway (1995) 17.8% Spain (1986) 15.0 ... organization and structure of service organizations within a particular culture ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Definition and Measurement of Disability


1
The Definition and Measurementof Disability
  • The Work of the Washington Group
  • Mitchell Loeb
  • National Center for Health Statistics, USA
  • for the Washington Group on Disability Statistics

2
The Washington Group on Disability Statistics (WG)
  • In June of 2001, the UN International Seminar on
    the Measurement of Disability recommended the
    development of principles and standard forms for
    global indicators of disability to be used in
    censuses
  • There was a broad consensus on the need for
    population based measures of disability for
    country use and for international comparisons

3
Current Problem
  • Censuses use one of four types of questions that
    provide widely differing estimates of national
    prevalence of disability.
  • The four types of questions include
  • Generic questions about the presence of a
    condition
  • Generic questions about the presence in the
    household of a person with a disability followed
    by a list of impairments
  • Checklist of impairments
  • Questions on functional domains

4
Variety in National Estimates
  • Developing Countries
  • Tunisia (1994) 1.2
  • Pakistan (1981) 0.5
  • Thailand (1990) 0.3
  • Turkey (1985) 1.4
  • Philippines (1995) 1.3
  • Developed Countries
  • Norway (1995) 17.8
  • Spain (1986) 15.0
  • United States (1994) 15.0

Data from surveys Source United Nations
Statistical Division
5
The WG was set up to
  • Foster international cooperation in the area of
    health and disability statistics
  • Untangle the web of confusing and conflicting
    disability estimates
  • Develop a small set of general disability
    measures
  • Develop extended set/s of items to measure
    disability on population surveys
  • Address methodological issues associated with
    disability measurement

6
Preliminary work to meet objectives
  • Clarify the purpose of data collection in order
    to identify appropriate measures
  • Understand choices being made when time, expenses
    and respondent burden limit number of questions

7
Moving from Concept to Definition to Measurement
  • The Conceptual Model
  • ICF selected as the conceptual model
  • Common point of reference
  • Common vocabulary
  • Does not provide an operational definition or a
    way to measure the concepts

8
The ICF Model
Source World Health Organization, 2001
9
Moving from Concept to Definition to Measurement
  • The Definitional Paradox
  • There is no single operational definition of
    disability
  • Different operational definitions lead to
    different estimates
  • The question you are trying to answer (the
    purpose) will determine which definition to use
  • Need to understand the choices that are being
    made when
  • a purpose a definition are chosen
  • time, expenses and respondent burden limit number
    of questions

10
Purpose of Data Collection
  • 3 major classes of purposes at aggregate level
  • Service Provision
  • Monitoring functioning in the population
  • Assess equalization of opportunities
  • 2 criteria for selection of a purpose
  • Relevanceparticularly for policy makers and
    program officials
  • Feasibility

11
Purpose Service provision
  • Seeks to identify those with specific needs,
    usually the most serious problems
  • Requires detailed information about the person
    and the environment
  • Influenced by the organization and structure of
    service organizations within a particular culture

12
Purpose Monitoring functioning in the population
Population reporting work limitation
  • Seeks to identify all those with activity or
    participation limitation
  • Response comparability problematic since
    participation is culturally and environmentally
    determined

13
Purpose Equalization of opportunities
Employed
  • Seeks to identify all those at greater risk than
    the general population for limitations in
    activity or participation
  • Disability as a demographic

14
Locating Risk in the ICF Model
?
ACTIVITY
Source World Health Organization, 2001
15
Moving from Concept to Definition to Measurement
  • Measurement of equalization of opportunities
  • Locate the definition of disability at the most
    basic level of activity/participation in core
    domains
  • Defined as the ability or inability to carry out
    basic actions at the level of the whole person
    (i.e. walking, climbing stairs, lifting packages,
    seeing a friend across the room)
  • Connection between disability and participation
    can be made during data analysis

16
Possible question options
  • Mobility
  • Walking
  • Climbing stairs
  • Bending or stooping
  • Reaching or lifting
  • Using hands
  • Sensory
  • Seeing
  • Hearing
  • Communicating
  • Understanding
  • Speaking
  • Cognitive functions
  • Learning
  • Remembering
  • Making decisions
  • Concentrating
  • Emotional functioning
  • Interpersonal interactions
  • Psychological well-being

17
Criteria for inclusion of domains
  • Cross cultural comparability
  • Suitability for self-report
  • Parsimony
  • Validity across various methodological modes

18
WG questions for censuses (short disability
measure)
  • Because of a Health problem
  • Do you have difficulty seeing even if wearing
    glasses?
  • Do you have difficulty hearing even if using a
    hearing aid?
  • Do you have difficulty walking or climbing
    stairs?
  • Do you have difficulty remembering or
    concentrating?
  • Do you have difficulty with (self-care such as)
    washing all over or dressing?
  • Using your usual (customary) language, do you
    have difficulty communicating (for example
    understanding or being understood by others)?
  • Response categories
  • No - no difficulty Yes - some difficulty
  • Yes - a lot of difficulty Cannot do at all

19
Objectives
  • Identify persons with similar types and degree of
    limitations in basic actions regardless of
    nationality or culture
  • Represent the majority (but not all) persons with
    limitations in basic actions in any one nation
  • Represent commonly occurring limitations in
    domains that can be captured in the Census
    context
  • Identify persons with similar problems across
    countries

20
Objectives
  • Compare levels of participation in employment,
    education, or family life for those with
    disability versus those without disability to see
    if persons with disability have achieved social
    inclusion
  • Monitor prevalence trends for persons with
    limitations in specific basic action domains
  • Emphasize that one measure will not satisfy
    multiple needs for disability data

21
Pre-testing activities
  • Two regional workshops successfully implemented
  • June 20-22, 2005 / Nairobi, Kenya
  • September 19-20, 2005 / Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

22
Standardized testing
  • 17 countries participating
  • 13 funded via World Bank grant, 4 self-funded
  • Cognitive tests in 13 countries
  • Congo, Egypt, Gambia, India, Kenya, Lesotho,
    Mauritius, Philippines, Uganda, Mexico, South
    Africa, Tanzania, Vietnam
  • Field tests in 4 countries
  • Gambia, Vietnam, Sweden, Tanzania
  • Combined cognitive/field test in 3 countries
  • Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay

23
Intended use of data
  • Compare levels of participation in employment,
    education, or family life for those with
    disability versus those without disability to see
    if persons with disability have achieved social
    inclusion
  • Monitor effectiveness of programs / policies to
    promote full participation can be monitored
  • Monitor prevalence trends for persons with
    limitations in specific basic activity domains

24
Limitations
  • One set of measures will not satisfy multiple
    needs for disability data
  • Excluded populations
  • Very young children
  • Institutionalized population
  • Homeless
  • Floating populations
  • It is not our purpose to
  • identify every person with a disability within
    every community
  • replicate a population evaluated across a wider
    range of domains that would be possible with
    other forms of data collection

25
Work on Extended Measures
  • The WG is reviewing disability questions from
    current instruments in order to form various
    recommended modules for different purposes
  • Going in-depth on the same 6 domains as covered
    by the census questions
  • Adding additional domains of functioning such as
    learning (especially for children), social
    interactions, and some of the other more complex
    activities listed in the ICF A/P classification.
  • Asking about participation
  • Asking questions on environmental factors.

26
Meeting Products and More Information
  • Executive summary of last seven meetings posted
    on the Washington Group website along with
    presentations / papers from the meetings
  • http//www.cdc.gov/nchs/citygroup.htm
  • Publication of key papers in a special issue of
    Research in Social Science and Disability
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