Objectives: We evaluated special education as an indicator of childhood disability and used that indicator to estimate lifetime dependency and life expectancy. Methods: Data: Panel Study of Income Dynamics and Health and Retirement Study (n = 20,563). Dependency: Nursing home care or equivalent. Analysis: We first analyzed special education as an indicator of childhood disability; multinomial logistic Markov models and microsimulation then compared populations with and without childhood disability. Results: Special education history was a valid indicator of childhood disability. For example, with parents who did not complete high school, 3.8% with no special education history were dependent at least 5 years of adult life; that result with special education was 15.2%. Life expectancy from age 20 was 58.3 years without special education, 46.0 years with special education (both p
CITATION STYLE
Laditka, S. B., Laditka, J. N., & Hoyle, J. N. (2021). Disability in Childhood, Special Education Histories, and Lifetime Health Outcomes in the United States. Journal of Aging and Health, 33(10), 919–930. https://doi.org/10.1177/08982643211018918
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