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1.
BACKGROUND: A major reason cited for continued restraint use in American nursing homes is the widely held belief that restraint reduction will lead to fall-related incidents and injuries. METHODS: This study represents an analysis of data collected in a clinical trial of interventions aimed at reducing the use of restraints in nursing homes. Two different designs were employed to test the relationship between restraint reduction and falls/injuries. First, multiple logistic regression was used to compare fall/injury rates in subjects who had restraints removed (n = 38) to those who continued to be restrained (n = 88); second, survival analysis was employed to test the relationship between physical restraint removal and falls/injuries at the institutional level by comparing fall/injury rates among three nursing homes (n = 633) with varying rates of restraint reduction. RESULTS: Based on the multiple logistic regression analysis, there was no indication of increased risk of falls or injuries with restraint removal. Moreover, restraint removal significantly decreased the chance of minor injuries due to falls (adjusted odds ratio: 0.3, 95% CI: 0.1, 0.9; p < .05). The survival analysis demonstrated that the nursing home that had the least restraint reduction (11%) had a 50% higher rate of falls (p < .01) and more than twice the rate of fall-related minor injuries (p < .001) when compared to the homes with 23% and 56% restraint reduction, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Physical restraint removal does not lead to increases in falls or subsequent fall-related injury in older nursing home residents.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effectiveness of a home exercise programme of strength and balance retraining exercises in reducing falls and injuries in elderly women. DESIGN: Randomised controlled trial of an individually tailored programme of physical therapy in the home (exercise group, n = 116) compared with the usual care and an equal number of social visits (control group, n = 117). SETTING: 17 general practices in Dunedin, New Zealand. SUBJECTS: Women aged 80 years and older living in the community and registered with a general practice in Dunedin. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Number of falls and injuries related to falls and time between falls during one year of follow up; changes in muscle strength and balance measures after six months. RESULTS: After one year there were 152 falls in the control group and 88 falls in the exercise group. The mean (SD) rate of falls was lower in the exercise than the control group (0.87 (1.29) v 1.34 (1.93) falls per year respectively; difference 0.47; 95% confidence interval 0.04 to 0.90). The relative hazard for the first four falls in the exercise group compared with the control group was 0.68 (0.52 to 0.90). The relative hazard for a first fall with injury in the exercise group compared with the control group was 0.61 (0.39 to 0.97). After six months, balance had improved in the exercise group (difference between groups in change in balance score 0.43 (0.21 to 0.65). CONCLUSIONS: An individual programme of strength and balance retraining exercises improved physical function and was effective in reducing falls and injuries in women 80 years and older.  相似文献   

3.
BACKGROUND: Falls warrant investigation as a risk factor for nursing home admission because falls are common and are associated with functional disability and because they may be preventable. METHODS: We conducted a prospective study of a probability sample of 1103 people over 71 years of age who were living in the community. Data on demographic and medical characteristics, use of health care, and cognitive, functional, psychological, and social functioning were obtained at base line and one year later during assessments in the participants' homes. The primary outcome studied was the number of days from the initial assessment to a first long-term admission to a skilled-nursing facility during three years of follow-up. Patients were assigned to four categories during follow-up: those who had no falls, those who had one fall without serious injury, those who had two or more falls without serious injury, and those who had at least one fall causing serious injury. RESULTS: A total of 133 participants (12.1 percent) had long-term admissions to nursing homes. In an unadjusted model, the risk of admission increased progressively, as compared with that for the patients with no falls, for those with a single noninjurious fall (relative risk, 4.9; 95 percent confidence interval, 3.2 to 7.5), those with multiple noninjurious falls (relative risk, 8.5; 95 percent confidence interval, 3.4 to 21.2), and those with at least one fall causing serious injury (relative risk, 19.9; 95 percent confidence interval, 12.2 to 32.6). Adjustment for other risk factors lowered these ratios to 3.1 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.9 to 4.9) for one noninjurious fall, 5.5 (95 percent confidence interval, 2.1 to 14.2) for two or more noninjurious falls, and 10.2 (95 percent confidence interval, 5.8 to 17.9) for at least one fall causing serious injury, but the association between falls and admission to a nursing home remained strong and significant. The population attributable risk of long-term admission to a nursing home for these three groups (the proportion of admissions directly attributable to the three categories of falls) was 13 percent, 3 percent, and 10 percent, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Among older people living in the community falls are a strong predictor of placement in a skilled-nursing facility; interventions that prevent falls and their sequelae may therefore delay or reduce the frequency of nursing home admissions.  相似文献   

4.
The purpose of this study was to investigate what viruses infiltrate into our nursing home, assess the related clinical symptoms in elderly subjects, and compare the incidence of infections with those in the general community. Between July 1994 and June 1995, 40 elderly persons dwelling in the nursing home were evaluated by clinical observation, serologic analysis, and viral culture of samples to determine the presence of viruses. Enteroviruses and herpes simplex I virus could be isolated from asymptomatic elderly subjects. Individuals with influenza B virus and RSV infections diagnosed by serology did have clinical symptoms. The prevalence of both influenza B virus and enteroviruses was related to that of such viruses in the general community. Our data suggest that respiratory viruses are readily transmitted from the community to nursing home residents.  相似文献   

5.
PURPOSE: Examine antiepileptic drug (AED) use in nursing homes by age, gender, and use of comedication that can interact with AEDs. METHODS: Two point-prevalence evaluations of AED use from computerized medical records of nursing home residents throughout the United States (set 1, 43,757; set 2, 41,386) 65 years and older serviced by PHARMERICA. RESULTS: 10.5% of residents received an AED. Of the age group 65-84 years, 15 % received an AED compared with 6.1% of those 85 years or older (p < 0.001). Gender differences were present; 13.4% of the male residents and 9.4% of the female residents were treated with an AED (p < 0.001). The most frequently prescribed AEDs were phenytoin, carbamazepine, clonazepam, or phenobarbital. The average number of routine medications taken by AED recipients was 5.6, greater than the average of 4.6 for other residents. CONCLUSIONS: AEDs are extensively prescribed for elderly nursing home residents. Men and persons aged 65-85 years were more likely to receive AEDs than were women or those older than 85 years. AED recipients receive more routine medications than do other residents, including co-medications that alter hepatic metabolism and clinical response. The reasons for age and gender differences are unclear and require further study.  相似文献   

6.
Essays were gathered from fifty-three elderly nursing home residents about the strongest meaning in their lives. These elderly nursing home residents most often reported the category of family relationships as central, followed by pleasure and then health. A chi-square analysis showed a significant difference between the type of meaning of the elderly nursing home residents and those of younger adults. An additional chi-square analysis found no significant difference between the nursing home residents and a group of golden anniversary couples' meanings. Finally, our results indicate that elderly nursing home residents do not report an absence of meaning in their lives.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Congestive heart failure is a major cause of mortality and morbidity in the elderly but the disease impact on the oldest and sickest population has not been defined. OBJECTIVES: To review the mortality and hospital readmission rate of institutionalized elderly persons with congestive heart failure and to examine the relation of baseline characteristics to subsequent clinical outcomes. METHODS: This was a retrospective analysis based on chart review of 231 residents of the Philadelphia (Pa) Geriatric Center (63 congregate housing tenants and 168 nursing home residents) 80 years and older, hospitalized with congestive heart failure from 1989 to 1995. Patients' demographic data and clinical, electrocardiographic, and echocardiographic findings were obtained from their initial (index) hospitalization records. Subsequent outcomes were obtained from their outpatient (nursing home or office) records. RESULTS: Thirteen percent died during the index hospitalization but the total mortality during the follow-up period was 87%. One hundred forty-six patients (63%) died in the first year with a mean +/- SD survival of 4+/-4 months and a readmission rate of 3.9 per patient-year. Eighty-five patients survived the first year with a readmission rate of 1.2 per patient-year and 54 patients subsequently died, with a mean +/- SD survival of 28+/-12 months. The first-year decedents and survivors were comparable in sex, age, medical history, and electrocardiographic findings. However, patients who died in the first year, compared with survivors, were more likely to be nursing home residents (81% vs 59%), have New York Heart Association class IV heart failure (54% vs 32%), have impaired left ventricular function by echocardiogram (53% vs 32%), and have renal insufficiency (32% vs 11%). CONCLUSIONS: Very elderly persons with congestive heart failure had a guarded long-term prognosis. Nursing home residency, class IV heart failure, impaired left ventricular function, and renal insufficiency were associated with higher risk for early death and repetitive hospitalizations.  相似文献   

8.
A prospective analysis was performed on 832 patients to determine the circumstances surrounding falls leading to hip fracture within a homogeneous, elderly urban population. Special emphasis was placed on the season of year, time of day, location of fall, and other circumstances in which the fracture occurred. All patients were community dwelling, cognitively intact, previously ambulatory elderly who sustained a femoral neck or intertrochanteric fracture. Most fractures occurred at home, particularly in patients who were older, less healthy, and poorer ambulators. More than 75% of fractures resulted from a fall while the patient was standing or walking. Most falls occurred during daylight hours with a peak seen in the afternoon. No seasonal variation in the incidence of hip fractures was observed.  相似文献   

9.
To better understand how elderly people with long-term care needs might be affected by Medicare's greater reliance on risk plans, we examine Medicare spending for this population using data from the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey. Medicare spending for elderly people with functional limitations is substantially greater than for other beneficiaries, but highly variable. Medicare spends more, however, for community residents with moderate to severe functional limitations than for nursing home residents with similar degrees of limitation. These results raise concerns about the incentives of Medicare risk plans in caring for enrollees with long-term care needs.  相似文献   

10.
PURPOSE: To determine the importance of fall characteristics, body habitus, function, and hip bone mineral density as independent risk factors for hip fracture in frail nursing home residents. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: In this prospective, case-control study of a single, long-term care facility, we enrolled 132 ambulatory residents (95 women and 37 men) aged 65 and older, including 32 cases (fallers with hip fracture) and 100 controls (fallers with no hip fracture). Principal risk factors included fall characteristics, body habitus, measures of functional assessment, and hip bone mineral density by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. RESULTS: In multivariate analysis, including only those with knowledge of the fall direction (n=100), those who fell and suffered a hip fracture were more likely to have fallen sideways (odds ratio 5.7, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.7 to 18, P= 0.004) and have a low hip bone mineral density (odds ratio 1.9, 95% CI 0.97 to 3.7, P=0.06) than those who fell and did not fracture. When all participants were included (n=132) and subjects who did not know fall direction were coded as not having fallen to the side, a fall to the side (odds ratio 3.9, 95% CI 1.3 to 11, P=0.01), low hip bone density (odds ratio 1.8, 95% CI 1.03 to 3, P=0.04), and impaired mobility (odds ratios 6.4, 95% CI 1.9 to 21, P=0.002) were independently associated with hip fracture. Sixty-seven percent of subjects (87% with and 62% without hip fracture) had a total hip bone mineral density greater than 2.5 SD below adult peak bone mass and were therefore classified as having osteoporosis using World Health Organization criteria. CONCLUSIONS: Among frail elderly nursing home fallers, the preponderance of whom are osteoporotic, a fall to the side, a low hip bone density, and impairment in mobility are all important and independent risk factors for hip fracture. These data suggest that, among the frailest elderly, measures to reduce the severity of a sideways fall and improve mobility touch on new domains of risk, independent of bone mineral density, that need to be targeted for hip fracture prevention in this high-risk group.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Norway has the highest reported incidence of hip fractures in western Europe. Little is known about the epidemiology of falls in Norway where the winter season is long and dark. The objective of this work was to study reported falls and their consequences among elderly Norwegians living at home. METHODS: A cross-sectional design was used for the study. Interviews were performed in the homes of 431 subjects, aged 67-97 years, living at home. Information on falling was gathered through six questions: whether the subject had fallen during the last six months, and if so, how many falls they had, where the last fall occurred, its perceived reason, the activity the subject had been engaged in when the fall occurred, and the resulting injury. RESULTS: In all, 24.1% of subjects reported falling during the last six months, and 9.5% had suffered more than one fall. Falls were most frequently linked to external events (63.1%). Outdoor falls were more frequent (59.0%; 95% CI = 51.2-82.0) than indoor falls. Older subjects were associated with more frequent indoor falls (p < 0.05), but gender was not significant. Fifty-one per cent of subjects had fallen while walking and 53% had suffered an injury from the last fall. In 13.4% of the women and 16.2% of the men, the last fall had resulted in a fracture. CONCLUSIONS: Compared to the results of other studies from industrialized Western countries, a similar crude fall rate, similar frequency and similar type of injury were found. However, in contrast to other studies, no gender difference was observed with regard to falling, place of falling and fracture rate.  相似文献   

12.
OBJECTIVE: Falls in the elderly are a major problem because of their high morbility and mortality rates and health expenditures. However, there are few studies about this problem in our country. The purpose of the present study was to know the frequency, features and consequences of falling among institutionalized elders. METHODS: We carried out a prospective cohort study using a sample of 190 persons aged 65 years and older living in two nursing homes. All subjects underwent a comprehensive evaluation at the onset of the study. During a mean follow-up period of 310 days, all falls were recorded. RESULTS: There were a total of 121 falls in 72 (37.9%) subjects, twenty five of whom (34.7%) experienced two or more falls. The fall incidence per person-year was 0.75. As compared with males, females had a density ratio (DR) of 2 (1.2-3.2; 95% confidence interval-CI). Falling was more frequent in the bedrooms and living rooms (43.8%). DISCUSSION: This results agree with others studies about the high fall incidence in the elderly and bring out new features about circumstances and consequences of falls.  相似文献   

13.
OBJECTIVE: More than half of nursing home residents suffer from urinary incontinence. These residents typically have long stays and, because of comorbid cognitive and physical impairments, have little hope of living again in a noninstitutional environment The value of interventions to change functional status of this chronically institutionalized population is often questioned. This paper explores this value issue in the context of two incontinence management interventions that have been shown to improve functional status: (1) Functional Incidental Training (FIT), and (2) Prompted Voiding (PV). The relative value of the different interventions for the nursing home population was estimated using paired preferences. DESIGN: The cost of two interventions (FIT and PV) that target incontinent nursing home residents was related to the value of these interventions as perceived by consumers of nursing home services. Both interventions decrease incontinence frequency, and one intervention also improves mobility endurance. PARTICIPANTS: Ninety incontinent nursing home residents received the intervention; 37 older nondemented board and care residents and 31 family members of the nursing home residents provided estimates of the intervention's value. MEASUREMENT: The staff-time allocations involved in implementing both interventions were documented in more than 85 resident care episodes. These time data were converted to labor cost based on the cost of nursing aides who would actually implement the intervention. The value of each intervention was assessed by asking consumers to make choices between the intervention and its associated outcomes (such as increased dryness) and other nursing home services of known cost (e.g., moving to a private room). RESULTS: Both interventions had labor costs that were greater than "usual care" costs. The additional cost was estimated to be $4.31 per resident per day for PV and $6.42 per resident per day for FIT if these programs were implemented from 7 AM to 7 AM. Consumer preference data indicated that consumers preferred the FIT and PV outcomes to more expensive alternative services, calculated to cost $10.00 per day, often marketed to consumers, CONCLUSION: Consumers may prefer the FIT and PV interventions relative to the typical services often marketed to the nursing home consumer. The analysis completed in this paper suggests that both interventions have value for frail residents likely to live out their lives in a nursing home.  相似文献   

14.
Computerized documentation in community health nursing is only now receiving the attention it deserves. The authors explain one agency's experience with adapting a computerized clinical documentation system to visiting nurses' needs and the nurses' responses to the process.  相似文献   

15.
This paper briefly describes changes in the nursing home market over a nine-year period, 1987 to 1996. Estimates are based on the "Institutional Population Component" of the 1987 National Medical Expenditure Survey (NMES) and the "Nursing Home Component" of the 1996 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS). Both surveys were sponsored by the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research. On January 1, 1996, approximately 1.56 million residents were receiving care in 16,840 nursing homes with 1.76 million beds. This compares to 1.36 million residents in 14,050 nursing homes with 1.48 million beds in 1987, increases of 15, 20 and 19 percent, respectively. The average size of a nursing home remained constant. The occupancy rate decreased from 92 percent in 1987 to 89 percent in 1996, in spite of the growth of the elderly population, both in relative and absolute terms. There was also a significant drop in the supply of nursing home beds relative to the elderly population; this decrease was observed in all four regions of the country, with the greatest drop being in the West. In 1987 only 28 percent of nursing homes were certified by both Medicare and Medicaid (dually certified), while this proportion increased to 73 percent in 1996. Conversely, while only 17 percent of nursing homes were certified by only Medicaid in 1996, a full 50 percent were certified as such in 1987. By far the most common type of nursing home in both 1987 and 1996 was the nursing home with only nursing home beds. Such nursing homes represented 87 percent of the market in 1987 but just 77 percent in 1996. The remaining were either hospital-based or nursing homes with personal care and/or independent living beds in addition to nursing home beds or were part of a continuing care retirement community.  相似文献   

16.
Issues of consumer choice, and rising public expenditures of nursing facility care for the rapidly increasing elderly population have fueled interest in community reentry of nursing facility residents. The Minimum Data Set Plus (MDS+) contains a wealth of information which can be used to provide a better understanding of nursing facility residents including those who discharge. This study employs the Andersen model of health services utilization and logistical regression on MDS+ data to examine characteristics of higher functioning nursing facility residents age 65 and over related to community reentry in one midwestern state. Findings include having Medicaid as a payer source significantly decreased the likelihood of discharge. In contrast, being younger than 85, retaining decision making responsibilities, and having no cognitive impairments were found to increase the likelihood of discharge. Policy and program implications related to identifying and assisting nursing facility residents in resuming community living are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
What are the mental health status and active treatment needs of nursing home residents? A stratified random sample of 828 residents in 25 facilities serving Medicaid recipients was assessed for levels of physical and psychosocial functioning. Although 91.2% had sufficiently high levels of medical and physical care needs to justify nursing home placement, 79.6% also had moderate to intense needs for mental health care. Older residents, relative to their younger counterparts, had more intense medical and mental health care needs. It was also found that psychiatric diagnosis was a poor indicator of mental health service needs, particularly among elderly individuals. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

18.
TOPIC: The use of Margaret A. Newman's theory by psychiatric nursing students with elderly nursing home residents. SOURCE: The author's work with baccalaureate nursing students. CONCLUSIONS: Nurses who form relationships with elderly nursing home residents can help their clients identify problematic patterns, move to a choice point, then to a higher level of consciousness, resulting in a reduction in problematic patterns of behavior.  相似文献   

19.
Injury sustained through falling is a significant risk for the elderly and a significant burden on the health service. Although many risk factors have been detected and interventions proposed, there remains limited evidence concerning the cost-effectiveness of fall prevention. This study addressed the cost-effectiveness of a home assessment and modification program hypothesised to reduce risk of falling for the independent elderly. Due to a lack of direct clinical trial evidence concerning such an intervention, a decision analytic model was developed to simulate the potential costs and outcomes of the intervention. The model was developed using available published literature concerning injury in the elderly, focusing on Australian data where possible. Cost-effectiveness was estimated as the cost per fall prevented and cost per injury prevented. Over a one-year period, the incremental cost of introducing the intervention was $172 per person, resulting in an incremental cost per fall prevented of $1,721 and cost per injury prevented of $17,208. Over a 10-year period, the intervention resulted in a cost saving of $92 per person (i.e. dominance, with cost savings in addition to reduced falls and injuries). This analysis indicates that there is potential for considerable benefit to be gained from this intervention, in terms of less morbidity, fewer hospitalisations and, possibly, improved quality of life. However, these results are based on a model constructed from various data sources and assumptions so, although results are indicative, further research is required to provide firm data before definitive policy conclusions and recommendations may be made.  相似文献   

20.
Reliance on the use of volunteers and lay paraprofessionals in human services delivery has increased with the rising demand and shortage of professional providers. We examined the effects of a volunteer training program on depression levels of nursing home residents. The Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale (SDS) was used to identify 60 moderately depressed residents. A total of 20 volunteer counselors (10 elderly, 10 adolescent) were trained in empathic listening, and 20 volunteer counselors (10 elderly, 10 adolescent) were only given information regarding the aging process. Counselors and nursing home residents met twice a week for 5 weeks. Zung SDS posttest results showed that residents who received a volunteer counselor significantly improved (p  相似文献   

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