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Missing data and imputation in the international studies following the Harmonized Cognitive Assessment Protocol

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  • Erik Meijer
  • Ying Liu
  • Jere R Behrman

Abstract

ObjectivesMissing data poses special challenges in aging research when health and functional declines of older adults limit data collection. Large-scale, cross-national studies further suffer from cultural, linguistic, and educational differences across populations. Little is known about such challenges and mitigation strategies.MethodsWe leveraged international studies following the Harmonized Cognitive Assessment Protocol (HCAP), which was designed to ascertain the prevalence of and characterize relevant risks for mild cognitive impairment and dementia globally. By describing the current practice in studies under 6 diverse geographic contexts (United States, England, Chile, Mexico, India, and China), we documented the ways in which missing data were harmonized and handled to facilitate cross-national research.ResultsVarious missing codes were used to document reasons for missingness. Overall, the rates of missingness were low, around 15% of observations in studies for India and China, and up to 7% for other countries. Item-level missingness and missing subinterviews (neurocognitive assessments on the older adults or their informants’ reports) were imputed using chained equations. Dementia classification was also imputed for individuals in the parent studies from the Health and Retirement Study-International Family Studies (HRS-IFS), of which the HCAPs are substudies.DiscussionThe current practice worked well in the HCAP studies. We include concrete recommendations on best practices for study design, data collection, and post hoc treatments to mitigate challenges due to missing data, and for use and reporting of the imputed HCAP data.

Suggested Citation

  • Erik Meijer & Ying Liu & Jere R Behrman, 2026. "Missing data and imputation in the international studies following the Harmonized Cognitive Assessment Protocol," The Journals of Gerontology: Series B, The Gerontological Society of America, vol. 81(Supplemen), pages 55-63.
  • Handle: RePEc:oup:geronb:v:81:y:2026:i:supplement_1:p:s55-s63.
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