Chronic Disease and Disability in the Community: A Prevalence Study
- 26 September 1970
- Vol. 3 (5725) , 762-764
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.3.5725.762
Abstract
A two-stage prevalence survey of disability (defined as the inability to perform unaided defined activities essential to daily life) used questionnaires on a random sample of the population living in north Lambeth. The central estimates of the prevalence of disability in those aged 35-74 are 7·2% for men and 9·7% for women. Among the disabled population locomotor impairments were more common in women; internal impairments were more common in men. For men and women together chronic respiratory disease, mainly bronchitis, was shown to be the single most common condition associated with disability. Though for women there may be an association between low social class and disability and between marital break-up and disability, these associations, though statistically significant, are weak. The data are therefore considered to be more widely relevant for the planning of health and welfare services.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- A set of tests for measuring motor impairment in prevalence studiesJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1969
- Chronic-disease Classification in Evaluation of Medical Care ProgramsMedical Care, 1969