David L. Roth
Johns Hopkins University
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Featured researches published by David L. Roth.
Neurology | 2006
Mary S. Mittelman; William E. Haley; Olivio J. Clay; David L. Roth
Objective: To determine the effectiveness of a counseling and support intervention for spouse caregivers in delaying time to nursing home placement of patients with Alzheimer disease (AD), and identify the mechanisms through which the intervention accomplished this goal. Methods: We conducted a randomized controlled trial of an enhanced counseling and support intervention compared to usual care. Participants were a referred volunteer sample of 406 spouse caregivers of community-dwelling patients who had enrolled in the study over a 9.5-year period. The intervention consisted of six sessions of individual and family counseling, support group participation, and continuous availability of ad hoc telephone counseling. Structured questionnaires were administered at baseline and at regular follow-up intervals, every 4 months for the first year and every 6 months thereafter. Cox proportional hazard models were used to test the effects of the intervention on the time to nursing home placement for the patients after controlling for multiple time-invariant and time-dependent predictors of placement. Results: Patients whose spouses received the intervention experienced a 28.3% reduction in the rate of nursing home placement compared with usual care controls (hazard ratio = 0.717 after covariate adjustment, p = 0.025). The difference in model-predicted median time to placement was 557 days. Improvements in caregivers’ satisfaction with social support, response to patient behavior problems, and symptoms of depression collectively accounted for 61.2% of the intervention’s beneficial impact on placement. Conclusion: Greater access to effective programs of counseling and support could yield considerable benefits for caregivers, patients with Alzheimer disease, and society.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2006
Karlene Ball; Daniel L. Roenker; Virginia G. Wadley; Jerri D. Edwards; David L. Roth; Gerald McGwin; Robert Raleigh; John J. Joyce; Gayla M. Cissell; Tina Dube
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the relationship between performance‐based risk factors and subsequent at‐fault motor vehicle collision (MVC) involvement in a cohort of older drivers.
Health Psychology | 1998
Kathryn T. Goode; William E. Haley; David L. Roth; Greg R. Ford
Alzheimers family caregivers (N = 122) reported on physical and mental health, as well as stress process variables, at baseline and at a 1-year follow-up. Hierarchical regression analyses of stress process models revealed that increases in primary stressors (e.g., patient self-care and behavioral problems) did not directly affect changes in the mental and physical health outcome variables. However, analyses of models of direct, mediated, and moderated effects revealed that psychosocial resource variables (appraisals, coping responses, and social support) were related to caregiver outcomes over time through several mechanisms. In particular, benign appraisals of stressors, the use of approach coping, and greater levels of social support were associated with more positive caregiver health outcomes over time.
Optometry and Vision Science | 2005
Olivio J. Clay; Virginia G. Wadley; Jerri D. Edwards; David L. Roth; Daniel L. Roenker; Karlene Ball
Purpose. Driving is a complex behavior that requires the utilization of a wide range of individual abilities. Identifying assessments that not only capture individual differences, but also are related to older adults’ driving performance would be beneficial. This investigation examines the relationship between the Useful Field of View (UFOV) assessment and objective measures of retrospective or concurrent driving performance, including state-recorded accidents, on-road driving, and driving simulator performance. Method. The PubMed and PsycINFO databases were searched to retrieve eight studies that reported bivariate relationships between UFOV and these objective driving measures. Cumulative meta-analysis techniques were used to combine the effect sizes in an attempt to determine whether the strength of the relationship was stable across studies and to assess whether a sufficient number of studies have been conducted to validate the relationship between UFOV and driving performance. Results. A within-group homogeneity of effect sizes test revealed that the samples could be thought of as being drawn from the same population, Q [7] = 11.29, p (one-tailed) = 0.13. Therefore, the effect sizes of eight studies were combined for the present cumulative meta-analysis. The weighted mean effect size across the studies revealed a large effect (Cohen’s d = 0.945), with poorer UFOV performance associated with negative driving outcomes. This relationship was robust across multiple indices of driving performance and several research laboratories. Conclusions. This convergence of evidence across numerous studies using different methodologies confirms the importance of the UFOV assessment as a valid and reliable index of driving performance and safety. Recent prospective studies have confirmed a relationship between UFOV performance and future crashes, further supporting the use of this instrument as a potential screening measure for at-risk older drivers.
Psychology and Aging | 1995
William E. Haley; Constance A. C. West; Virginia G. Wadley; Greg R. Ford; Faye A. White; John J. Barrett; Lindy E. Harrell; David L. Roth
Psychological, social, and health variables were compared in 175 Black and White family caregivers of patients with dementia and 175 Black and White noncaregivers. Caregivers and noncaregivers did not differ within race on demographic variables. Caregiving was associated with increased depression and decreased life satisfaction only in White families. However, caregiving appears to have similar social consequences for Black and White families, including restriction of social activity and increased visits and support by family from outside of the home. Race, but not caregiving, was associated with physical health variables. Methodological issues in comparing well-being in Black and White caregivers, in particular the importance of including noncaregiving comparison subjects are discussed.
International Journal of Std & Aids | 2001
David L. Roth; Katharine E. Stewart; Olivio J. Clay; Ariane van der Straten; Etienne Karita; Susan Allen
As part of a longitudinal investigation, the husbands and cohabiting male partners of 684 Rwandan women were recruited to participate in an HIV testing and counselling programme. All of the women and 256 of the men (37%) had previously received standard testing and generic counselling services. In this project, all of the men participated in an extensive, male-focused counselling programme. This included 428 men who were receiving testing and counselling for the first time. Interview responses indicated that rates of condom use during sexual intercourse increased dramatically at the one-year follow-up assessment for the serodiscordant couples. This effect was especially strong for couples whose male partners were receiving testing and counselling for the first time. Rates of condom use also increased substantially in seroconcordant HIV-positive couples whose partners had both been tested previously. Women in couples with at least one seropositive partner reported lower rates of coercive sex by their male partners after they completed the counselling programme. Male-focused and couple-focused testing and counselling programmes appear to be effective in reducing risky sexual behaviours in heterosexual couples, even if one or both partners have received testing and counselling services previously.
Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2009
Jerri D. Edwards; Melissa Lunsman; Martinique Perkins; George W. Rebok; David L. Roth
BACKGROUND Older adults who cease driving have poorer health than those who continue to drive. However, it is unclear whether the transition to driving cessation itself results in health declines or whether driving cessation subsequently exacerbates health declines over time. METHODS The current study addresses these questions using multilevel modeling among 690 older adults from the Advanced Cognitive Training for Independent and Vital Elderly study. Driving status and health, as indicated by the SF-36 questionnaire, self-rated health, physical performance (Turn 360 degrees Test), and depressive symptoms were assessed at baseline and at 1-, 2-, 3-, and 5-year follow-up visits. RESULTS The transition to driving cessation was accompanied by significant declines in physical and social functioning, physical performance, and physical role (ps < .05). Health declines after driving cessation were steeper for general health. CONCLUSIONS The transition to driving cessation is associated with health declines for older adults as measured by several indicators. Additionally, general health declines more sharply following driving cessation. These findings highlight the importance of interventions to sustain driving mobility among older adults.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1995
Gary R. Hunter; Margarita S. Treuth; Roland L. Weinsier; T. Kekes-Szabo; Sherron H. Kell; David L. Roth; Christal Nicholson
OBJECTIVES: The objectives of this study were to determine the effects of a strength‐training program on walking speed and relative muscular stress, as measured by normalized integrated electromyographic (nIEMG) activity, while carrying a box of groceries and standing from a chair.
Perceptual and Motor Skills | 2000
Renee S. Myers; Karlene Ball; Thomas D. Kalina; David L. Roth; Kathryn T. Goode
The purpose of this study was to examine the value of a clinical driving assessment battery in predicting performance on an on-road driving test. 43 participants referred to the Bryn Mawr Rehab Adapted Driving Program for evaluation of driving ability underwent an evaluation consisting of a predriver screening and an on-road driving test. The predriver screening included a vision screening, a reaction time task, a split-attention task, the Hooper Visual Organization Test, verbal and symbolic sign recognition, and assessment of Useful Field of View. Logistic regression analyses were applied to identify which predriver screening variables could be used to predict outcome on the on-road driving test (pass/fail); UFO® was that best single predictor. The addition of screening tests beyond UFOV® alone did not increase predictive validity. These findings suggest that UFOV® may serve as an indicator of the need for further driving assessment.
Psychosomatic Medicine | 1987
David L. Roth; David S. Holmes
&NA; An experiment was conducted to determine whether aerobic exercise training or relaxation training would be effective for reducing the deleterious effects of life stress on physical and psychologic health. Over 1000 college students were surveyed, and 55 of those who reported experiencing a high number of negative life events over the preceding year were assigned to an aerobic exercise training condition, a relaxation training condition, or a no‐treatment control condition. Physical and psychologic health were assessed with self‐report measures before, halfway through, immediately following, and 8 weeks after the 11‐week training (and control) period. Heart rate data collected during a treadmill test indicated that the aerobic exercise training was effective for improving cardiovascular fitness. Psychologic measures indicated that the exercise training condition was more effective than the other two conditions for reducing depression during the first 5 weeks of training. No differences were found among the conditions on self‐report measures of physical health. These findings suggest that aerobic exercise training may be useful for reducing the severity and duration of depressive reactions following stressful life change.