Functional Status, Receipt of Help, and Perceived Health |
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Authors: | Robert J. Johnson Fredric D. Wolinsky |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Sociology, Kent State University, Post Office Box 5190, Kent, Ohio, 44242-0001;(2) Saint Louis University Health Sciences Center, USA |
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Abstract: | We model the effects of disability, functional limitation, and receipt of help on perceived health. This analysis specifies a model with two dimensions of disability and three dimensions of functional limitation, including upper body disability, lower body disability, basic activities of daily living (ADLs), household ADLs, and advanced ADLs. The latent variables of receiving help are modeled for each of the ADLs as intervening between limitations and perceived health. The results show that instrumental social support in the form of receiving help for ADLs has no substantive independent effect on perceived health. In addition, receiving instrumental social support shows a pattern of task-specific responses to individual measures of need. Implications for both caregiver and care recipient are discussed. |
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Keywords: | perceived health activities of daily living help disability social support social networks |
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