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. 2012 Jul 9:12:35.
doi: 10.1186/1471-2318-12-35.

The Longitudinal Urban Cohort Ageing Study (LUCAS): study protocol and participation in the first decade

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The Longitudinal Urban Cohort Ageing Study (LUCAS): study protocol and participation in the first decade

Ulrike Dapp et al. BMC Geriatr. .

Abstract

Background: We present concept, study protocol and selected baseline data of the Longitudinal Urban Cohort Ageing Study (LUCAS) in Germany. LUCAS is a long-running cohort study of community-dwelling seniors complemented by specific studies of geriatric patients or diseases. Aims were to (1) Describe individual ageing trajectories in a metropolitan setting, documenting changes in functional status, the onset of frailty, disability and need of care; (2) Find determinants of healthy ageing; (3) Assess long-term effects of specific health promotion interventions; (4) Produce results for health care planning for fit, pre-frail, frail and disabled elderly persons; (5) Set up a framework for embedded studies to investigate various hypotheses in specific subgroups of elderly.

Methods/design: In 2000, twenty-one general practitioners (GPs) were recruited in the Hamburg metropolitan area; they generated lists of all their patients 60 years and older. Persons not terminally ill, without daily need of assistance or professional care were eligible. Of these, n = 3,326 (48 %) agreed to participate and completed a small (baseline) and an extensive health questionnaire (wave 1). In 2007/2008, a re-recruitment took place including 2,012 participants: 743 men, 1,269 women (647 deaths, 197 losses, 470 declined further participation). In 2009/2010 n = 1,627 returned the questionnaire (90 deaths, 47 losses, 248 declined further participation) resulting in a good participation rate over ten years with limited and quantified dropouts. Presently, follow-up data from 2007/2008 (wave 2) and 2009/2010 (wave 3) are available. Data wave 4 is due in 2011/2012, and the project will be continued until 2013. Information on survival and need of nursing care was collected continuously and cross-checked against official records. We used Fisher's exact test and t-tests. The study served repeatedly to evaluate health promotion interventions and concepts.

Discussion: LUCAS shows that a cohort study of older persons is feasible and can maintain a good participation rate over ten years, even when extensive self-reported health data are collected repeatedly through self-filled questionnaires. Evidently individual health developments of elderly persons can be tracked quantifying simultaneously behaviour, co-morbidity, functional competence and their changes. In future, we expect to generate results of significance about the five study aims listed above.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Longitudinal urban cohort ageing study flow chart: The first ten years.1 For details see Stuck and colleagues [27]. 2 For details see Dapp and colleagues [28].
Figure 2
Figure 2
Longitudinal urban cohort ageing study time flow and intervention chart 2000–2010.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Longitudinal urban cohort ageing study participation, refusals, deaths and losses over the first nine years. particip: percentage of participants remaining from baseline (n = 3,326). refusers: percentage of persons who refused the current wave but had participated in the previous wave. deaths: percentage of persons who died between the previous and current wave. lost: percentage of persons who were lost to follow-up between the previous and current wave.

References

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