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Experimental Aging Research
An International Journal Devoted to the Scientific Study of the Aging Process
Volume 8, 1982 - Issue 3
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Original Articles

Characteristics of dropouts in longitudinal research on aging: A study of Mexican Americans and Anglos

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Pages 163-167 | Published online: 27 Sep 2007

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WilliamJ. McAuley, MeganE. McCutcheon, ShirleyS. Travis & Jean Lloyd. (2006) Participant Characteristics Predicting Voluntary Early Withdrawal from a Multidisciplinary Program Providing Home-Delivered Meals and Dietitian/Social Work Case Management to Homebound Elders. Journal of Nutrition For the Elderly 25:2, pages 83-99.
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BonnieF. Hatchett, Lydia Garcia & Christina Marin. (2002) Significance of Family Involvement for Older Mexican American Women: Implications for Practice. Journal of Family Social Work 6:2, pages 55-68.
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WillisJ. Goudy. (1985) Effects of sample attrition and data analysis in the retirement history study. Experimental Aging Research 11:3, pages 161-167.
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Articles from other publishers (12)

Merton S. Krause. (2018) Randomness is problematic for social science research purposes. Quality & Quantity 53:3, pages 1495-1504.
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Inna Bragina & Claudia Voelcker-Rehage. (2018) The exercise effect on psychological well-being in older adults—a systematic review of longitudinal studiesDer Effekt körperlicher Aktivität auf das psychische Wohlbefinden bei älteren Erwachsenen – ein systematisches Review längsschnittlicher Studien. German Journal of Exercise and Sport Research 48:3, pages 323-333.
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Janey C Peterson, Paul A Pirraglia, Martin T Wells & Mary E Charlson. (2012) Attrition in longitudinal randomized controlled trials: home visits make a difference. BMC Medical Research Methodology 12:1.
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Rex S. Toh & Michael Y. Hu. (2009) Toward a General Theory of Diary Panels. Psychological Reports 105:3_suppl, pages 1131-1153.
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Kerri M. Clough-Gorr, Aliza K. Fink & Rebecca A. Silliman. (2008) Challenges associated with longitudinal survivorship research: attrition and a novel approach of reenrollment in a 6-year follow-up study of older breast cancer survivors. Journal of Cancer Survivorship 2:2, pages 95-103.
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Cathleen M Connell, Benjamin A. Shaw, Sara B. Holmes & Norman L. Foster. (2001) Caregivers' Attitudes Toward Their Family Members' Participation in Alzheimer Disease Research: Implications for Recruitment and Retention. Alzheimer Disease and Associated Disorders 15:3, pages 137-145.
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M.V Zunzunegui, F Béland & P Gutiérrez-Cuadra. (2001) Loss to follow-up in a longitudinal study on aging in Spain. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 54:5, pages 501-510.
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Bonnie F. Hatchett, Karen Holmes, Daniel A. Duran & Cujuan Davis. (2016) African Americans and Research Participation. Journal of Black Studies 30:5, pages 664-675.
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Ian P. Donald & C.J. Bulpitt. (1998) The Gloucestershire Longitudinal Study of Disability. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 51:12, pages 1305-1310.
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Rex S. Toh & Michael Y. Hu. (1996) Natural mortality and participation fatigue as potential biases in diary panels. Journal of Business Research 35:2, pages 129-138.
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Barbara A. Zsembik. (2016) Ethnic and Sociodemographic Correlates of the Use of Proxy Respondents. Research on Aging 16:4, pages 401-414.
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Kyriakos S. Markides, Dianne M. Timbers & J. Scott Osberg. (1984) Aging and health: a longitudinal study. Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics 3:1, pages 33-49.
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