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Original Article
6 (
4
); 523-528
doi:
10.4103/0976-3147.165392

An estimation of the prevalence of intellectual disabilities and its association with age in rural and urban populations in India

Department of Epidemiology, School of Health Sciences, College of Public Service, Jackson State University, Jackson, USA
Department of Public Health, Eastern Washington University, Cheney, Washington, USA
Department of Behavioral Health and Education, School of Health Sciences, College of Public Service, Jackson State University, Jackson, Mississippi, USA
Address for correspondence: Mr. Ram Lakhan, Doctoral Candidate in Public Health (Epidemiology). Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Health Sciences, College of Public Service, Jackson State University, 350, West Woodrow Wilson Drive, Jackson, MS 39213, USA. E-mail: ramlakhan15@gmail.com
Licence

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

Disclaimer:
This article was originally published by Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd and was migrated to Scientific Scholar after the change of Publisher.

Abstract

Background:

Intellectual disability (ID) is a global public health concern. Prevalence of ID and its association with age and other demographic factors is required for planning purposes in India.

Objective:

This study analyzed the age-adjusted prevalence of ID in rural and urban populations and its correlation with age in children and adults.

Materials and Methods:

Disability data published in the report (2002) of National Sample Survey Organization were analyzed, using Z-test to measure differences in age-adjusted prevalence. Spearman rho was calculated to determine strength and direction of the association, and regression analysis was used to predict prevalence rate, based on age in rural and urban population settings.

Results:

Overall, India has a prevalence of 10.5/1000 in ID. Urban population has slightly higher rate (11/1000) than rural (10.08/1000; P = 0.044). Age was found to be highly correlated with prevalence of ID in rural children (ϱ =0.981, P = 0.019) as well as in children (ϱ = −0.954, P = 0.000) and adults (ϱ = −0.957, P = 0.000) in urban population. The possibility of confounding or the existence of covariates for children in urban settings was noted.

Conclusion:

Results of this study match findings in other epidemiological studies. However, multistage, large-scale studies are recommended for investigating prevalence rates with different severity levels of ID.

Keywords

Age
confounding
covariates
India
intellectual disability
National Sample Survey Organization report
population studies
prevalence
rural
urban

Introduction

The Prevalence of intellectual disabilities (ID) in India is not well known. India has the world's largest children population who are at higher risk of developmental disabilities.[123]

The prevalence of ID in India varies by age, gender, population-type, and place of residence.[456789101112] These demographic and geographic factors influence awareness of ID, its prevention, health care, and rehabilitation services, which further impact its incidence and prevalence.[121113141516] The burden of chronic and infectious diseases, poverty, poor sanitation, poor access to health care, rapidly growing population, pollution, and exposure to harmful chemicals increase the risk of ID in the nation.[11], 1217 ,[181920]

Previous studies have documented varied prevalence rates for ID in India, ranging between 1.7 cases/1000 and 32 cases/1000.[45678910] This variation may have occurred due to differences in diagnostic criteria, case definition, sample size, and survey methods applied in the studies.[4510111216]

The population of India is very large, thus very small difference in prevalence rate can make a huge difference in the total number of people with ID, further impacting state and national level polices and budget allocation to the disability sector.

The issue of prevalence is very important for several reasons, including population prevention intervention planning and education, rehabilitation planning, and health care services.[1112] Accurate estimation of ID prevalence can help policy makers formulate appropriate welfare policies and allocate budget accordingly. Healthcare, rehabilitation, educational, vocational and social needs of ID population vary with their age. The larger population live in rural settings in India with significantly higher rates of poverty, inaccessibility of health care and rehabilitation services compared to urban settings. The difference in prevalence between urban and rural settings with regard to age is needed for planning and development of services. Understanding of prevalence in rural and urban population can also help public health officials to develop appropriate preventive programs.

Objective

This study examines the correlation between age and prevalence of ID in children and adults and compares between rural and urban populations in India.

Materials and Methods

Prevalence data from the National Sample Survey Organization (NSSO) 2002 were used for this study.[12] The survey was conducted by the Indian Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment. Known as NSS 58th round, report number 485 (58/26/1) Disabled Person in India.[21] The report is freely available in the public domain and is the NSSO's latest survey report available on the prevalence of ID in India. Referred to as mental disability in the report, it was the 1st time the Indian government included ID and mental illness in the disability identification survey. This screening survey was conducted by nonmedical personnel. However, the screening questionnaire was designed with the help of consultants in the field. The questionnaire was designed using International Classification of Diseases-10 based criteria of ID diagnosis, in which it is referred as a significantly subaverage intellectual functioning, slow development, during the developmental period and deficit in adaptive behavior. The consultants were medical doctors and experienced in disability survey. The questionnaire was field tested and validated before use.[21] Consultants also assisted with sample size calculation. Multi-stage sampling with randomization was applied in selecting villages at the district level, and for districts at the state level, in order to minimize selection bias. Geographically, the entire country was covered except those living in the interior villages of Nagaland, Andaman and Nicobar, Leh and Kargil Districts of Jammu Kashmir due to political circumstances (<1% of the Indian population also lives in these locations). Data were collected from 45,571 households in 4637 rural villages, and 24,731 households in 3354 urban blocks. Completed in 6 months, the survey began in July and ended in December of 2002. Data are presented on several continuous and categorical variables in tables and the appendix while variables and key terms were explained in the text.[21] For this research, data were taken from the text of the report on age, gender, and residential settings and tables developed for statistical analysis. Data were also broken in two major categories children (below 18 years) and adults (18 years and above) for testing the hypothesis.

Statistical analysis

Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS) – 21, (IBM) was used for analysis. Spearman correlation (ϱ) was computed for the prevalence of ID and age among children and adults in rural and urban settings to determine associations. Z-test was used to determine differences between ID prevalence in rural and urban settings at specific age groups to determine any significant differences. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to determine associations between the mean ages and prevalence rates stratifying for age groups. Association of children and adult age groups with the prevalence of ID in rural and urban populations was examined with simple linear regression analyses.[12]

Results

Distribution of prevalence across age groups indicated that the age range with the highest levels of ID was 5 through 35 years in rural areas and between 5 and 39 years in the urban setting. The peak rates for the rural setting were in the 15–19 year age group (172/100,000) higher than the peak for the urban setting (165/100,000), which was in the 10–14 years age group. The urban peak was, however, more diffuse (10–19) as the prevalence for the 15–19 years group was 164 [Table 1]. ID prevalence differs significantly for three age groups between rural and urban population: Age group 5–9 (z = −2.322, P = 0.020), 35–39 (z = −2.315, P = 0.020), and 45–49 (z = −3.160, P = 0.001) [Table 1].

Table 1 Prevalence of ID in different age groups in India data from NSSO report: Cases per 100,000

The analysis, using spearman rho, indicated that the prevalence of ID in children was significantly positively associated with age in the rural (ϱ =0.981, P = 0.019) but not significantly so (ϱ =0.834, P = 0.166) in the urban population. Whereas, prevalence of ID in adults is significantly inversely associated with age in both rural (ϱ = −0.954, P = 0.001) and urban (ϱ = −0.957, P = 0.001) areas [Figures 1 and 2, Table 2].

Figure 1
Prevalence of intellectual disabilities among rural and urban children in India (constructed from Table 1)
Figure 2
Prevalence of adult intellectual disabilities in rural and urban adults in India (constructed from Table 1)
Table 2 Correlation of ID prevalence with age in children, adult population in rural and urban India

In children, ANOVA (F = 52.063, P = 0.019) indicated strong association between age and prevalence of ID in the rural population, where adjusted R2 = 0.945, demonstrates that 94.5% of the variance in ID prevalence in children is explained by age [Table 3]. In adults, ANOVA (F = 70.658, P = 0.000) indicated strong association between age and prevalence in the rural population where adjusted R2 = 0.897, demonstrating that 89.7% of the variance in prevalence is explained by age in rural settings. Similarly, ANOVA (F = 77.022, P = 0.000) indicated strong association between age and ID prevalence in the urban population among adults, where adjusted R2 = 0.905 demonstrates that 90.5% of the variance in ID prevalence is explained by age in the urban population. There was no significant association (P = 0.166) between age and ID prevalence among children in the urban setting [Table 3]. When analyzed for the total in the two environments, there were significant associations in both the rural (F = 15.657, R2 = 0.550, P = 0.002), and urban (F = 25.188, R2 = 0.668, P = 0.000) settings. However, the model fit was less, indicating that the covariates may be more mutually diverse and independent of one another.

Table 3 Regression analysis showing association of age with prevalence of ID in rural and urban settings in India

The linear regression equation was obtained for predicting the prevalence of ID in rural and urban population on the basis of the age. According to this predictive model, age increases of 1 year significantly predicted an increase in prevalence of 7.440 children/100,000 (CI = 3.003 through 11.877), and prevalence decrease of 3.203 adults (CI = −4.104 through −2.302)/100,000 in rural population. In the urban setting, the model significantly predicted an ID prevalence decrease of 3.033/100,000 (CI = −3.851 through −2.216) per mean year increase in age among adults. In urban children, there was no significant prediction (CI = −5.642 through 16.802) with the wide confidence limits also indicating that there may be confounders or multiple covariates, of age for predicting ID in that setting. Overall, age significantly inversely predicted ID prevalence in both rural (adjusted B = −2.165, CI = −3.369 through −0.961) and urban (B = −2.408, CI = −3.464 through −1.352) environments.

Discussion

This study finds that age is an important factor for ID in rural children, and among adults in both rural and urban populations in India. ID is linearly positively associated with age in rural children. However, it is inversely associated with age in rural and urban adult populations. The cumulative prevalence of ID in the overall population was found to be 10.5 cases/1000, with 10.08/1000 in rural, and 11/1000 in the urban population. These findings are consistent with several epidemiological studies.[345678910142223] However, ID is not significantly associated with, nor predicted by age for children in urban areas. The reasons for these differences are unknown, with our models indicating possible confounders or covariates (factors) may be involved.

The prevalence rate of ID was higher among urban children until the age of 14 years after which it peaked higher in rural children than urban in the 15–19 years age group. However, the adult population between age 20 and 34 in rural setting showed slightly higher prevalence than urban. From 35 years of age, adults in rural population had a lower rate of ID than the urban. Despite that the urban population has better health facilities and awareness of disabilities while rural population suffers with poor facilities, lack of identification, referral, health, and low level of awareness, the reasons for observed differences in prevalence rates are unclear.[3151624252627] Prevalence of ID gradually drops in adults from the age of 20 years in both rural and urban population. However, the literature indicates some studies of covariates of ID[2829303132] These studies have been mostly based on clinical and not necessarily covariates from a population perspective.

There are significantly higher prevalence rates of ID in children compared to adults. The correlates of these discrepancies are unknown[12] and call for empirical investigations to determine the risk factors. This survey may have identified people with more severe ID, which may be related to issues with sensitivity of the survey instruments used, case identification, access to data sources, and/or measurement of health indicators. People with severe ID have shorter life expectancy than those with less severe (IQ above 50) or no ID despite developments in medical care, health facilities, rehabilitation, and public health services that focus on ID.[3334353637383940414243444546] In addition, people with ID tend to have higher risks for other social, behavioral, and health issues than those who are healthy.[47484950515253]

Limitations and confounding factors

Other developmental disabilities, such as Autism, Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder, and Tourette syndrome closely match with ID in characteristics and features and also show high comorbidity. Other neurological, genetic metabolic, and psychiatric disorders such as cerebral policy, Down syndrome, William Syndrome, Prader–Willi syndrome, Fragile-X syndrome, Klinefelter syndrome, mucopolysaccharidosis, and childhood schizophrenia in children, vascular dementia originated from stroke, Alzheimer and Parkinson's disease in adults often show some features of ID.[54] However, the questionnaire, having been designed and validated by experts, had less chance of falsifying non-ID as ID, but it cannot be denied that few cases of similar features might have been mixed up in the data because of survey data collector's possibly limited training on ID, or other errors in data collection.

Conclusion

Findings in this study are similar to other epidemiological studies.[12555657] This study was able to demonstrate relationships between age and prevalence of ID in rural/urban populations. However, this study could not identify prevalence rates with regard to the severity of ID, which is very important for planning purposes. Two-stage epidemiological studies are recommended, to identify specific prevalence rates with each degree of ID, and large epidemiological population studies to identify social, environmental, and biological determinants and correlates. Also, because it is unclear why prevalence among children is significantly higher than among adults, correlates and contexts of ID among children in both rural and urban settings should be studied to identify areas for intervention.

Acknowledgment

The first author sincerely thanks his coauthors (who are also his professors in public health). They helped him with research design, literature review, data analysis, and preparation of this manuscript. All coauthors have contributed significantly in preparation of this manuscript. The first author also would like to thank his family for continued and unconditional support.

Source of Support: Nil.

Conflict of Interest: None declared.

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