27 research outputs found
Lifestyle-Adjusted Function: Variation Beyond BADL and IADL Competencies
Purpose:âUsing the Activity Card Sort (ACS), we derived a measure of lifestyle-adjusted function and examined the distribution of this measure and its correlates in a community sample of older adults at risk for disability transitions.âDesign and Methods:âParticipants in the Sources of Independence in the Elderly project (n = 375) completed the ACS using a Q-sort (successive pile sort procedure), in which respondents sorted 39 nonbasic activities of daily living (non-BADL) and noninstrumental activities of daily living (non-IADL) tasks into four categories: ânever performed,â âused to but no longer perform,â âhard to do,â and âeasy to do.â Lifestyle-adjusted function was defined as the number reported easy/(number easy + number hard + number no longer performed).âResults:âRespondents reported that they found it easy to perform about 60% of the activities they ever performed. However, people reporting BADL and IADL disability found it easy to perform only 32% of these activities. Lower extremity performance and depressive symptoms were significant independent correlates of lifestyle-adjusted function in models that controlled for sociodemographic and clinical status. The same 2 correlates were significant in models that excluded people with self-reported BADL or IADL disability.âImplications:âBecause this measure eliminates activities never performed, it can be considered âlifestyle adjusted.â Its ability to identify differences in competency among people who do not report BADL or IADL disability suggests that it may be a useful addition to functional assessment