Aging Clin Exp Res, Vol. 17, No. 3 165 Assessment of functional status has been formalized in medical practice since Karnofsky proposed an instrument in 1948 to evaluate patients undergoing cancer therapy and in geriatric practice since Katz introduced the activities of daily living (ADL) in 1963 (1, 2). The field grew rapidly and by 1984 Feinstein identified 43 different indexes of ADL for use in patient care and population research (3). In the two decades since then the field has flourished, with widespread utilization of functional status instruments in surveys of the older population, epidemiologic studies, clinical research, randomized controlled trials and clinical practice. This issue of the Journal has a variety of articles that demonstrate that the field of disability research is alive and well, with many exciting innovations. The issue can be viewed as a microcosm of the kinds of research being widely done in the field of disability and therefore serves as an excellent basis for reviewing these varied applications. We find here examples of how functional assessment plays an important role in public health, prevention, clinical care, and improving our basic understanding of the mechanisms whereby disease leads to disability. An impressive aspect that speaks to the vitality of the field is the wide geographic origin of the disability-related papers in this issue alone, with investigators from Japan, Taiwan, the US, Germany, Italy, France, the Netherlands, Norway, and Belgium making contributions. An important function of public health is to evaluate the population’s health status and track changes in important conditions. Assembling data on total and causespecific mortality, disease incidence and health care utilization is an important part of this effort, but characterizing the disability status of the older population adds an important dimension to what the disease and death statistics tell us. Downward trends in disability prevalence have been documented in several countries and, in this issue, Peres et al. present strong evidence that mobility and instrumental ADLs, but not ADLs, have The evolution of research on disability in old age
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