Do Activities of Daily Living Have a Hierarchical Structure? An Analysis Using the Longitudinal Study of Aging

Abstract
Background. It has long been thought that individual activities of daily living (ADLs) can be combined to form a hierarchy or Guttman scale. The purpose of this study is to determine if ADLs fit into a single hierarchical structure, and to examine how such a hierarchy should be evaluated. Methods. We use data from the baseline year of the Longitudinal Study of aging, a nationally representative survey of noninstitutionalized persons 70 years of age and older. For each of the 360 permutations of the ADLs within the katz hierarchy, we calculate the standard measures of fit of ordered data to a Guttman Scale: the coefficient of reproducibility, the minimum marginal reproducibility, the percentage improvement, and the coefficient scalability. Results. We find that although the Katz hierarchy does satisfy the traditional requirements for scalability, many other ADL hierarchies also satisfy these criteria. Specifically, our analysis shows that there are 4 hierarchies at least as good as the Katz hierarchy, and 103 hierarchies which satisfy the minimum standard for scalability. Conclusions. We conclude that the typical scalogram methodology may not be sufficient to summarize data, and that a multiplicity of disability profiles may exist

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