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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment of Older People: Self-Maintaining and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living

M. P. Lawton, +1 more
- 21 Sep 1969 - 
- Vol. 9, Iss: 3, pp 179-186
TLDR
Two scales first standardized on their own population are presented, one of which taps a level of functioning heretofore inadequately represented in attempts to assess everyday functional competence, and the other taps a schema of competence into which these behaviors fit.
Abstract
THE use of formal devices for assessing function is becoming standard in agencies serving the elderly. In the Gerontological Society's recent contract study on functional assessment (Howell, 1968), a large assortment of rating scales, checklists, and other techniques in use in applied settings was easily assembled. The present state of the trade seems to be one in which each investigator or practitioner feels an inner compusion to make his own scale and to cry that other existent scales cannot possibly fit his own setting. The authors join this company in presenting two scales first standardized on their own population (Lawton, 1969). They take some comfort, however, in the fact that one scale, the Physical Self-Maintenance Scale (PSMS), is largely a scale developed and used by other investigators (Lowenthal, 1964), which was adapted for use in our own institution. The second of the scales, the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living Scale (IADL), taps a level of functioning heretofore inadequately represented in attempts to assess everyday functional competence. Both of the scales have been tested further for their usefulness in a variety of types of institutions and other facilities serving community-resident older people. Before describing in detail the behavior measured by these two scales, we shall briefly describe the schema of competence into which these behaviors fit (Lawton, 1969). Human behavior is viewed as varying in the degree of complexity required for functioning in a variety of tasks. The lowest level is called life maintenance, followed by the successively more complex levels of func-

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Citations
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Completed suicide among older patients in primary care practices: a controlled study

TL;DR: Whether physical and psychiatric illness, functional status, and treatment history distinguish older primary care patients who committed suicide from those who did not is investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selected as the best paper in the 1990s: Reducing frailty and falls in older persons: an investigation of tai chi and computerized balance training.

TL;DR: To evaluate the effects of two exercise approaches, tai chi (TC) and computerized balance training (BT), on specified primary outcomes (biomedical, functional, and psychosocial indicators of frailty) and secondary outcomes (occurrences of fall).
Journal ArticleDOI

Unmet care needs and key outcomes in dementia.

TL;DR: To determine how unmet needs for activity of daily living tasks influenced nursing home placement, death, or loss to follow‐up in dementia, a large number of patients with dementia were placed in nursing homes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical disability in older adults: A physiological approach

TL;DR: Re-grouping of tasks of daily life may provide a more refined physiologically-based outcome measure for use in evaluating causes of disability, and the ability to define risk factors for disability may be enhanced by choosing outcome measures with a demonstrated physiologic rationale.
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Causes of nursing home placement for older people with dementia: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Poorer cognition and behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) were consistently associated with an increased risk of nursing home admission and most of the meta-analyses demonstrated impairments in activities of daily living as a significant risk.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship of mental and physical status in institutionalized aged persons

TL;DR: It was found that persons tended to have disabilities consistent with the type of services to be expected in the institution, and patients in state hospitals had the largest number with poor mental functional status, while there was predominance of persons with poor physical functional status found in the nursing homes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lives in Distress

J. N. Agate
- 06 Nov 1965 - 
TL;DR: The authors conclude that the " achillogram " is reliable as radioiodine uptake and better than the B.M.R. and the serum cholesterol and also reliable in a given patient when the results of treatment are being followed over a period.
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