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      The Impacts of Unmet Needs for Long-Term Care on Mortality Among Older Adults in China

      1 , 2 , 3
      Journal of Disability Policy Studies
      SAGE Publications

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          Sampling Weights and Regression Analysis

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            Gender And Elder Care In China

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              Unmet care needs and key outcomes in dementia.

              To determine how unmet needs for activity of daily living tasks influenced nursing home placement, death, or loss to follow-up in dementia. An 18-month longitudinal design, with interviews administered every 6 months. Eight catchment areas in the United States. Five thousand eight hundred thirty-one dementia patients and their caregivers were included at baseline. Measures of sociodemographic context of care; functional, cognitive, and behavioral status of care recipients; caregiver stress and well-being; and formal and informal resources served as covariates. The independent variables of interest were unweighted unmet care need scores and unmet need scores weighted by importance and severity in a prior sample of older consumers of long-term care. Outcomes included nursing home placement, death, and loss to follow-up. Cox regression models suggested that greater unmet need was predictive of nursing home placement, death, and loss to follow-up. These results were apparent when the unweighted and the weighted scores for unmet need with activity of daily living dependencies were used. Unmet need may be useful in identifying dementia care recipients at risk for nursing home placement and death. Further study of unmet need is needed to effectively assess and target intervention protocols during the course of dementia.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Disability Policy Studies
                Journal of Disability Policy Studies
                SAGE Publications
                1044-2073
                1538-4802
                December 03 2013
                March 2015
                May 16 2013
                March 2015
                : 25
                : 4
                : 243-251
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Shanghai University, China
                [2 ]National University of Singapore, Singapore
                [3 ]Portland State University, OR, USA
                Article
                10.1177/1044207313486521
                fbed93fe-5f41-45d3-a89e-8addc735381a
                © 2015

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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