Literature DB >> 24045721

Do interviewer and physician health ratings predict mortality?: a comparison with self-rated health.

Megan A Todd1, Noreen Goldman.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite the serious biases that characterize self-rated health, researchers rely heavily on these ratings to predict mortality. Using newly collected survey data, we examine whether simple ratings of participants' health provided by interviewers and physicians can markedly improve mortality prediction.
METHODS: We use data from a prospective cohort study based on a nationally representative sample of older adults in Taiwan. We estimate proportional-hazard models of all-cause mortality between the 2006 interview and 30 June 2011 (mean 4.7 years' follow-up).
RESULTS: Interviewer ratings were more strongly associated with mortality than physician or self-ratings, even after controlling for a wide range of covariates. Neither respondent nor physician ratings substantially improve mortality prediction in models that include interviewer ratings. The predictive power of interviewer ratings likely arises in part from interviewers' incorporation of information about the respondents' physical and mental health into their assessments.
CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this study support the routine inclusion of a simple question at the end of face-to-face interviews, comparable to self-rated health, asking interviewers to provide an assessment of respondents' overall health. The costs of such an undertaking are minimal and the potential gains substantial for demographic and health researchers. Future work should explore the strength of the link between interviewer ratings and mortality in other countries and in surveys that collect less detailed information on respondent health, functioning, and well-being.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24045721      PMCID: PMC3968811          DOI: 10.1097/EDE.0b013e3182a713a8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epidemiology        ISSN: 1044-3983            Impact factor:   4.822


  21 in total

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3.  A COMPARISON OF SELF AND PHYSICIANS' HEALTH RATINGS IN AN OLDER POPULATION.

Authors:  H J FRIEDSAM; H W MARTIN
Journal:  J Health Hum Behav       Date:  1963

4.  A simple equation for estimating the expectation of life at old ages.

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5.  Measurement of cumulative physiological dysregulation in an older population.

Authors:  Christopher L Seplaki; Noreen Goldman; Maxine Weinstein; Yu-Hsuan Lin
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2006-02

6.  Why do Hispanics in the USA report poor health?

Authors:  Sharon Bzostek; Noreen Goldman; Anne Pebley
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7.  When mental health becomes health: age and the shifting meaning of self-evaluations of general health.

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8.  What do global self-rated health items measure?

Authors:  N M Krause; G M Jay
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9.  Mortality prediction with a single general self-rated health question. A meta-analysis.

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  7 in total

1.  Cohort Profile: The Social Environment and Biomarkers of Aging Study (SEBAS) in Taiwan.

Authors:  Jennifer C Cornman; Dana A Glei; Noreen Goldman; Ming-Cheng Chang; Hui-Sheng Lin; Yi-Li Chuang; Baai-Shyun Hurng; Yu-Hsuan Lin; Shu-Hui Lin; I-Wen Liu; Hsia-Yuan Liu; Maxine Weinstein
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2.  U.S. Immigration Policy Regimes and Physical Disability Trajectories Among Mexico-U.S. Immigrants.

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3.  Interviewers' Ratings of Respondents' Health: Predictors and Association With Mortality.

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4.  Subjective health in adolescence: Comparing the reliability of contemporaneous, retrospective, and proxy reports of overall health.

Authors:  Kenneth A Bollen; Iliya Gutin; Carolyn T Halpern; Kathleen M Harris
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5.  Discordance between physician-rated health and an objective health measure among institutionalized older people.

Authors:  Javier Damián; Roberto Pastor-Barriuso; Emiliana Valderrama-Gama; Jesús de Pedro-Cuesta
Journal:  BMC Geriatr       Date:  2015-07-09       Impact factor: 3.921

6.  What Matters Most for Predicting Survival? A Multinational Population-Based Cohort Study.

Authors:  Noreen Goldman; Dana A Glei; Maxine Weinstein
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-07-19       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Adolescent reserve capacity, socioeconomic status and school achievement as predictors of mortality in Finland - a longitudinal study.

Authors:  Paulyn Jean Acacio-Claro; Leena Kristiina Koivusilta; Judith Rafaelita Borja; Arja Hannele Rimpelä
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2017-12-28       Impact factor: 3.295

  7 in total

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