Performance of the Washington Group questions in measuring blindness and deafness.

Health affairs scholar Pub Date : 2024-10-15 eCollection Date: 2024-11-01 DOI:10.1093/haschl/qxae131
Scott D Landes, Bonnielin K Swenor, Jean P Hall
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Abstract

The Washington Group Short Set (WGSS) questions are intended to measure the severity of disability and disability status in US federal surveys. We used data from the 2010-2018 National Health Interview Survey to examine the performance of the WGSS visual disability and hearing disability questions in capturing blindness and deafness. We found that the WGSS questions failed to capture 35.7% of blind adults and 43.7% of deaf respondents as having a severe disability, or, per their recommended cut point, as being disabled. Coupled with evidence demonstrating the poor performance of the WGSS questions in estimating the size of the overall disability population, we contend that results from this study necessitate a halt in the use of the WGSS questions to measure disability in US federal surveys.

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华盛顿小组问题在测量失明和失聪方面的表现。
在美国联邦调查中,华盛顿组简易问题集(WGSS)问题旨在测量残疾的严重程度和残疾状况。我们利用 2010-2018 年全国健康访谈调查的数据,研究了 WGSS 视力残疾和听力残疾问题在捕捉失明和失聪方面的表现。我们发现,WGSS 的问题未能将 35.7% 的成年盲人和 43.7% 的聋人受访者视为严重残疾,或按照其建议的切点视为残疾。再加上有证据表明 WGSS 问题在估算整体残疾人口数量方面表现不佳,我们认为本研究的结果表明有必要停止在美国联邦调查中使用 WGSS 问题来测量残疾情况。
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