Internationally Comparable General Disability Measures

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
2/8/2014 Measuring Disability and Monitoring the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities… … the work of the Washington Group on Disability.
Advertisements

The ICF and statistics on disability and health Classification, Assessment, Surveys and Terminology (CAS/EIP) World Health Organization Geneva T Bedirhan.
The Budapest Initiative*: Measuring Population Health Status in Surveys and Censuses * The Joint UNECE/WHO/Eurostat Task Force on Measurement of Health.
Barbara M. Altman Emmanuelle Cambois Jean-Marie Robine Extended Questions Sets: Purpose, Characteristics and Topic Areas Fifth Washington group meeting.
Disability Statistics at NCHS: An Update
SPECA Regional Workshop on Disability Statistics, Dec 13-15, 2006 Issues Related to Disability Measurement: Special considerations Daniel Mont Disability.
Purpose of Testing Census Questions on Disability Regional Meeting of UN Washington City Group on Disability Statistics Rio de Janeiro September 19,20.
Short Set Update Barbara M. Altman Disability Statistics Consultant To NCHS.
The Definition and Measurement of Disability
TRANSLATION PROTOCOL PREPARED BY ETHEL JN. BAPTISTE ADAPTED FROM EURO-REVES, NOV 2003.
Using the ICF as a Framework for Washington Group Measures Barbara M. Altman Jennifer Madans Elizabeth Rasch National Center for Health Statistics.
Measuring Disability in a Survey or Census Context: Parallel Work Advancing the Field Barbara M. Altman, Ph.D. Disability Statistics Consultant.
Viewing Measures via the Matrix: Do we have what we need? Angela Me With Jennifer Madans, Barbara Altman, and Beth Rasch Ottawa, January 2003 Second meeting.
1. 2 Andrew J. Houtenville, Ph.D. Employment and Disability Institute School of Industrial and Labor Relations Cornell University Ithaca, New York The.
4th Meeting of the Washington Group on Disability Statistics Fourth meeting of the WG: objectives and agenda Jennifer H. Madans U.S.A.
Jennifer Madans Associate Director for Science
General Disability Measures Used in Developed Countries: Question Characteristics Beth Rasch representing the collaborative work of the UN, ISTAT, and.
SPECA Regional Workshop on Disability Statistics: Dec 13-15, 2006 Purposes of Disability Statistics Jennifer Madans and Barbara Altman National Center.
Building a disability database to monitor the implementation of UNCRPD in your country Adele D. Furrie Council of Canadians with Disabilities CANADA
Daniel Mont Disability and Development Team The World Bank
The Role of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF) in TR Practice, Research, and Education Chapter 4 HPR 453.
NCPEDP Study on Disability Question in Population Census of India 2011 Prepared by DEOC.
September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Internationally Comparable General Disability Measures Barbara M. Altman National Center for Health Statistics.
SPECA Workshop on Disability Statistics, Dec 13-15, 2006 The Definition and Measurement of Disability: The Work of the Washington Group Jennifer Madans.
Fifth Annual Meeting of the WG: Objectives and Agenda Jennifer H. Madans U.S.A.
September 151 Screening for Disability Washington Group on Disability Statistics.
…from Census to Survey: a framework for the development of extended question sets for use on surveys Mitch Loeb USA Washington Group on Disability Statistics.
October 151 Measuring Disability in Censuses and Household Surveys Mitchell Loeb National Center for Health Statistics, USA for the Washington Group on.
Disability Statistics: a Regional Perspective for SAARC Dr. S. K. Nath DG, CSO, India.
National Institute for Public Health and the Environment WG 5 Rio September 2005 Marijke de Kleijn1 Washington Group on Disability Statistics: extended.
10/13/2015 Monitoring the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities… … and the work of the Washington Group on Disability Statistics Mitchell.
The Role of Functioning in Measuring Well-Being Jennifer Madans, Ph.D. Associate Director for Science, NCHS 4 th OECD World Forum on Statistics, Knowledge.
UNICEF’s work and planned activities for the production of data on children with disabilities Claudia Cappa, Data and Analytics Section, UNICEF, NY.
Measuring Disability Prevalence Daniel Mont, HDNSP Disability and Development Team June 6, 2007.
The Definition and Measurement of Disability: The Work of the Washington Group (continued) Daniel Mont Disability and Development Group The World Bank.
Proposed Purpose of an Internationally Comparable General Disability Measure Jennifer H. Madans, Barbara M. Altman, Elizabeth K. Rasch – NCHS Malin Synneborn,
Presentation on Field tests Margie Schneider Dan Mont 6 th Meeting of the Washington Group Kampala, Uganda 10 – 13 th October 2006.
Comments on the ‘Proposed content of census questions for international use’ Xingyan Wen Ros Madden Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.
The Disability Measurement Matrix Barbara M. Altman Jennifer Madans Elizabeth Rasch Angela Me Margaret Mbogoni Elena Palma.
Comments on Proposal for Development of Extended Measurement Sets Jennifer Madans For Barbara M. Altman National Center for Health Statistics, U.S.
Ninth Annual Meeting of the WG: Objectives and Agenda Jennifer H. Madans U.S.A.
Extended sets – draft proposal Washington Group Meeting Dublin, Ireland 19 – 21 September 2007 Margie Schneider (Workgroup coordinator)
SPECA Meeting, Paris, June 16, 2006 Activities Related to Health and Disability Statistics in the UNECE Region and Globally Jennifer H. Madans for the.
The WG Workgroup on Child Functioning and Disability Elena De Palma *, Roberta Crialesi *, Mitchell Loeb** Washington Group on Disability Statistics *Italian.
Australian experience in developing disability questions for the census.
… the work of the Washington Group on Disability Statistics Jennifer H. Madans National Center for Health Statistics, USA for the Washington Group on Disability.
WG/UNICEF Child functioning module: Preliminary results from Samoa & Supporting documentation Mitchell Loeb National Center for Health Statistics/ Washington.
Measuring the Disability Continuum in a Policy Context Barbara M. Altman, PhD Disability Statistics Consultant Stephen P. Gulley, PhD Brandeis University.
Therapeutic Exercise Foundations and Techniques Part I General Concepts Chapter 01 Therapeutic Exercise: Foundational Concepts.
Measuring disability in South Africa: Data gaps & challenges Population Statistics Division Statistics South Africa 7 December 2016.
Disability Inequality Index
ICF and DISABILITY Theoretical Background PART A
UNICEF/WG MODULE ON INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
UNICEF/WG MODULE ON CHILD FUNCTIONING: TESTING and ANALYSIS
Disability Employment Module
Background Non-Formal Education is recognized as an important sub-sector of the education system, providing learning opportunities to those who are not.
Assessment Theory and Models Part I
UN Washington Group Report and Next Steps
Identification of Potential Disability Measures for the National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report Frances Chevarley, Barbara Altman, Ernest Moy.
Mental Health and Substance Use among Students with Disabilities
Module 2 Competency 1: Discuss disability models across the lifespan
Towards improved measures of disability for development indicators
French recent surveys on disability A few lessons
Comparing Estimates from the ACS and WG Question Sets
Determination of Disability
for disability data collection in Viet Nam
Xingyan Wen Ros Madden Australian Institute of Health and Welfare
Wrong Questions, Wrong Answers The Statistical Barrier to Accessibility Ann Frye Ann Frye Ltd.
International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) Jamie Pomeranz, PhD, CRC September 1, 2005.
Comments on Measuring Disability in an International Context
Presentation transcript:

Internationally Comparable General Disability Measures Barbara M. Altman National Center for Health Statistics U.S.A. September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Session Objective Explain how the questions were developed Understand the limited choices associated with developing census questions Understand the product that results from the question set September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Key Components Involved in Development of Questions Purpose of data collection in a census context Conceptual domains relevant to the measurement purpose Operationalization of domains to provide measurement tools September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Selection of purpose/s 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 Relevance Feasibility September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

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 September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Purpose: Monitoring functioning in the population Seeks to identify all those with activity or participation limitation Response comparability problematic since participation is culturally and environmentally determined Population reporting work limitation September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

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 September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Selecting Primary Purpose All 3 purposes were accepted as valid Equalization of opportunity was identified as the primary purpose of concern Decision made to develop questions to meet this purpose Monitoring the level of functioning was seen as a secondary purpose September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Source of Concepts for Measurement: ICF Model Health Condition (disorder or disease) Body Functions & Structure Activity Participation Environmental Factors Personal Factors Source: ICIDH-2, 1999 September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Moving from concept to measurement ICF as the conceptual model Common point of reference Common vocabulary Does not provide measurement questions or a way to measure the concepts September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Matching Purpose with Concept In order to address this purpose, we need to start by identifying persons who are at greater risk than the general population of experiencing restrictions in participating in role activities in the absence of any accommodation The source of our conceptual starting point is drawn from one of the primary domains of the ICF September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Selecting the Concept to Measure: The Body Body Function and Body Structure Identifies type of impairment Impairments do not necessarily reflect levels of capacity or performance of the person They locate the anatomical part and the physiological functioning Person is not necessarily “at risk” We chose not to use this concept for our purpose September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Selecting the Concept to Measure: Participation Participation – involvement in a life situation Represent problems an individual may have being involved or integrated into their community Involves the coordination of both physical and cognitive functioning to accomplish multiple tasks within and environment. Is too culturally bound to serve our purpose. September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Selecting the Concept to Measure: Activity Activity – the execution of an action or simple task Activity is the deliberate execution of an action (walking) or task (dressing) Activities are building blocks of participation Activity limitations are a good and basic identifier of ‘risk’ of limitations in participation in culturally defined roles. September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Locating Risk in the ICF Model Health Condition ACTIVITY Body Functions & Structure Participation Environmental Factors Personal Factors Source: ICIDH-2, 1999 September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Levels of Measurement Necessary to Capture Activity and Participation Mobility, seeing, hearing, learning Level 1 Willful Action Bathing, dressing, making meals, laundry Specific Tasks Level 2 Visiting with friends, going out to dinner Individual Organized Activity Level 3 Working at a job, being a parent, citizenship roles Cultural Role Participation Level 4 Level of Complexity Type of Measure Measure Examples September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Measurement of equalization of opportunities Locate the definition of disability at the most basic level of activity/participation This level is associated with the ability or inability to carry out basic functions at the level of the whole person (i.e. walking, climbing stairs, lifting packages, seeing a friend across the room) September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Possible types of questions Questions that measure various domains of functioning such as mobility, cognition, sensory functions, etc. A qualifier would need to ascertain that the action was accomplished without human or mechanical assistance September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Possible Question Choices 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 September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Criteria for Inclusion of Domains Cross cultural comparability Suitability for self-report Parsimony Validity across various methodological modes September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Number of Domains Selected Workgroup in agreement that Walking, Seeing and Cognitive functioning are core domains to be included Earlier discussions have indicated that 3-4 questions are the maximum available in many censuses Limitations on number of domains a function of space and mode – do we want to prioritize a domain list so that questions are available as space and other restrictions are relaxed? September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Draft questions for Censuses (general disability measure) 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? Because of a physical, mental, or emotional health condition, do you have difficulty communicating (for example understanding others or others understanding you)? a) No - no difficulty c) Yes - a lot of difficulty b) Yes - some difficulty d) Cannot do at all September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Decision Elements Introductory clause Response options Use of a time qualifier Use or non-use of assistive devices September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

What We are Not Identifying Are we screening or making estimates? Screening spreads the net widely – attempts to reduce false negatives by accepting false positives. Estimates are more focused on specific areas and should be more reliable. We are seeking to represent a continuum of experience in an either/or context. We can’t represent the total continuum. We have chosen not to provide a screening function since the continuum of disability is artificially dichotomized in various cultures at various points – for example, developed countries policies generally consider less limited functioning as part of disability, while developing countries do not have that luxury. We are seeking to measure actions and tasks that would be considered disability in almost any cultural setting, i.e. the more obvious situations. September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Meeting Products and Information Executive summary of meetings, presentations, and papers posted on the Washington Group website: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/citygroup.htm Publication of key papers in a special issue of Research in Social Science and Disability due this Fall September 19-20, 2005 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Willful action - reflects the individual’s will to carry out basic volitional bodily operations at the level of the organism (whole person); deliberate use of basic senses and body actions

Specific tasks - The execution of a group of willful actions by an individual. It is an indicator of a series of related or more complicated actions necessary to accomplish an objective

Organized activity - the accomplishment of a variety of specific tasks and willful actions in order to complete an activity that is socially recognized or defined in a culture; requires some form of interaction with others

Role participation - an individual’s involvement in performing recognized cultural roles