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Reliability of the longitudinal experts all data (LEAD) methodology for determining the presence of elver mistreatment

NCJ Number
307526
Journal
Journal of Elder Abuse & Neglect Volume: 33 Issue: 5 Dated: 2021 Pages: 385-397
Author(s)
Timothy F. Platts-Mills; John A. Encarnacion; Rayad Bin Shams; Karen-Richardson; Tony Rosen; Brad Cannell
Date Published
2021
Length
13 pages
Annotation

This study into the reliability of the Longitudinal, Experts, All Data (LEAD) methodology as a reference standard in confirming presence of elder mistreatment found moderate agreement between the two LEAD panels in determining presence of elder mistreatment.

Abstract

This study sought to investigate the reliability of the Longitudinal, Experts, All Data (LEAD) methodology as a reference standard in confirming presence of elder mistreatment. The authors found moderate agreement between the two LEAD panels in determining presence of elder mistreatment: 85% agreement; k = 0.58; 95% Confidence Interval 0.28–0.87. Individual raters for both LEAD panels reported being mostly certain or certain >90% of votes. Developing reliable screening tools to identify elder mistreatment requires an accurate and reproducible reference standard. The authors analyzed data from a large, emergency department-based study that used a LEAD panel to determine the reference standard. For this study, a second, blinded LEAD panel reviewed clinical material for 40 patients. For each panel, five content experts voted on whether elder mistreatment was present. Efforts to further characterize and improve the reliability of the LEAD methodology in this context are warranted. (Published Abstract Provided)