首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 296 毫秒
1.
BACKGROUND: Incontinence represents one of the common problems in long-term care geriatric facilities and nursing homes. However, in the Czech Republic data on prevalence, severity and incontinence-associated factors for nursing home residents are not available. The aim of the study was to report the prevalence of urinary (UI) and bowel incontinence (BI) in different geriatric facilities and to identify factors positively associated with incontinence. METHODS AND RESULTS: In a sample of 1162 residents of 18 long-term care facilities UI has been found in 684 residents (63.3%). Health and social care facilities did not differ significantly (60.7 vs 65.6%). Of the incontinent 294 residents (27.2%) suffered from permanent/daily incontinence, 390 (36.1%) from occasional transitory UI. Prevalence of BI reached 54.4%, as well as double incontinence (45.9%). Cognitive impairment, self-care ADL and/or mobility dependency and bed rest are factors significantly associated with UI (for all P < 0.001). However, age, gender and urinary tract infection did not reach the statistical significance (P = 0.280-0.069). Risk adjustment/stratification for UI revealed the prevalence of 33.0% in the low risk group. In the high risk group (high ADL dependency and severe cognitive impairment) the prevalence came up to 96.0%. CONCLUSIONS: Our study presents the first results focused on incontinence problem in long-term care geriatric institutions in the Czech Republic. High prevalence of this condition makes incontinence an important medical, nursing and economical yet neglected problem.  相似文献   

2.
Fecal incontinence in Wisconsin nursing homes: prevalence and associations   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
INTRODUCTION: This report determines the characteristics and health histories that are associated with fecal incontinence in a nursing home population. METHODS: A cross-sectional survey is reported comprised of data from the Health Care Finance Administration's Minimum Data Set submitted by Wisconsin skilled nursing facilities to the Wisconsin Center for Health Statistics' Annual Nursing Home Survey in 1992 and 1993. Demographic characteristics, functional status, and disease history were correlated with the dependent variable, fecal incontinence. RESULTS: In both 1992 and 1993, significant positive associations with fecal incontinence included the following, in order of adjusted odds ratios: urinary incontinence, tube feeding, any loss of activities of daily living, diarrhea, truncal restraints, pressure ulcers, dementia, impaired vision, fecal impaction, constipation, male gender, age, and increasing body mass index. Significant inverse associations were noted for heart disease and depression in one of the years and arthritis in both years. In both years, diabetes was not associated with fecal incontinence. CONCLUSION: Urinary incontinence frequently coexists with fecal incontinence. The treatment of fecal incontinence may depend more on awareness of these significant associations, such as tube feeding, impaction, diarrhea, and loss of activities of daily living, which might exacerbate fecal incontinence, than on the condition of the anal sphincter.  相似文献   

3.
OBJECTIVE: To provide data needed to design an intervention trial to prevent or treat skin disorders in a high risk, incontinent nursing home population. DESIGN: The incidence and prevalence of nine common skin disorders were measured prospectively over a 60-day period using trained observers. Urinary and fecal incontinence frequency were measured over 24 hours, and mobility was measured with subjects both in and out of bed. Direct measures of skin moisture were taken with an impedance device in the presence and absence of urinary incontinence. Multiple regression analyses were used to relate the incontinence and mobility variables to the presence and development of skin disorders. SETTING: Four nursing homes. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred incontinent nursing home residents. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Prospective measures of nine common skin disorders and skin moisture in four perineal regions under continent and incontinent conditions. RESULTS: All subjects had at least one skin condition identified during the 60-day data collection period. The most commonly observed skin condition was blanchable erythema, which occurred in 94% of the subjects, predominantly in the front and back regions that were closest to the urethra and rectum. Twenty-one percent of residents developed either a Stage 1 (nonblanchable erythema) or 2 pressure ulcer. All skin conditions were transient when measured every 3 weeks with the exception of blanchable erythema, which showed stability. Stage 3 or greater pressure ulcers and edema were not observed, and interrater reliability for the measure of papules was poor. Measures of urinary and fecal incontinence severity were correlated with blanchable erythema severity, and blanchable erythema and low bed mobility were predictive of pressure ulcer severity. Blanchable erythema severity was also predictive of Stage 1 and 2 pressure ulcers. Skin moisture levels in the back perineal farthest from the rectum (peripheral) were affected most by urinary incontinence. CONCLUSION: A trial to detect a 50% preventive effect on Stage 1 and 2 pressure ulcers would require that 167 subjects be monitored for 60 days. The transient nature of the skin effects require that skin be monitored at least once a week. Because blanchable erythema is so prevalent and appears to be associated with more severe skin conditions, it would make an excellent marker for beginning to assess the potential preventive effects of various interventions on the incidence of pressure ulcers and other related skin disorders in incontinent patients. It is likely that the back area peripheral to the urethra and rectum would experience the greatest benefit from an intervention trial to reduce moisture caused by incontinence.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
6.
BACKGROUND: Urinary incontinence (UI) represents a prevalent nursing problem in geriatric facilities. Yet, comparison of the Czech Republic with countries using different chronic care system has not been conducted. METHODS AND RESULTS: Data from INTERRAI international database from 8 countries: Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Japan, Sweden and USA have been evaluated in the sample of 280,271 nursing home residents. Prevalence of bladder and bowel incontinence and correlates with selected clinical factors have been determined and national samples compared with the results of 1080 patients in the Czech Republic. Prevalence of UI reached from 42.9% in Japan to 65.2% in France. France and CR belong to countries with the highest prevalence of both bladder and bowel incontinence. Cognitive impairment and dependency in ambulation are factors significantly associated with UI in all countries (p < 0.001). Immobility, age, gender and urinary tract infection reached the statistical significance only in some countries. CONCLUSIONS: High prevalence of bladder and bowel incontinence has been demonstrated in an extended sample of nursing home residents. Common protocol Resident Assessment Instrument-Minimum Data Set (RAI-MDS) and creation of a large cross-national database are opening up possibilities for a new level of clinical research in geriatrics.  相似文献   

7.
In a study of the epidemiology of infection due to Clostridium difficile at long-term-care facilities, we conducted point-prevalence surveys and obtained stool samples from residents receiving antibiotics and from those developing diarrhea during 1 year at a 350-bed nursing home and an adjoining 280-bed chronic-care hospital. C. difficile and/or its cytotoxin was detected in 236 specimens from 94 residents. Only 16 (17%) of these 94 individuals had diarrhea at the time C. difficile was detected. The prevalence of C. difficile infection ranged from 2.1% to 8.1% in the nursing home and from 7.1% to 14.7% in the hospital. The organism was recovered from six (8.8%) of 68 residents receiving antibiotics, and four of the six developed antibiotic-associated diarrhea. The receipt of antibiotic treatment within the previous 8 weeks (odds ratio [OR], 7.9), the presence of a nasogastric or gastrostomy feeding tube (OR, 6.5), urinary and fecal incontinence (OR, 2.5), and the presence of more than three underlying diseases (OR, 2.0) were statistically significant independent variables associated with C. difficile infection. Typing of isolates by restriction-endonuclease analysis indicated that most C. difficile infections at this long-term-care facility were associated with endogenous enteric carriage of the organism, with little evidence of cross-infection.  相似文献   

8.
This paper reports the results of a pilot study of a nurse-led continence promotion service in both the community and a local nursing home. Telephone and written referrals were made to the service from 28 primary care teams in Glasgow, Scotland. In the nursing home all patients were assessed and an appropriate management plan implemented. A full assessment was carried out in all community patients, including an appraisal of contributory factors, urinalysis and diaries of food and drink intake. A management plan suited to the patient was then implemented. Patients' levels of incontinence in both arms of the study were assessed objectively using the Lagro-Janssen method. The cost incurred in both arms of the study were measured. There was a 69% improvement in the level of incontinence in the community group compared with 30% in the residents wing and 13% in the hospital wing. The savings in the nursing home amounted to Pounds 4152 in the residents' wing and Pounds 1959 in the hospital wing. In summary, a nurse dedicated to urinary incontinence in the community allows improved management, a greater level of awareness and results in resource savings, whilst increasing patient accessibility to a service.  相似文献   

9.
Whether or not rates of nursing home admissions among elders with urinary incontinence varied by their place of residence was investigated. We also examined whether any observed residential differences could be accounted for by factors other than incontinence that are known to influence rates of institutionalization. Data from the Longitudinal Study on Aging (1984-1990) were used to examine a sample who at baseline lived in community settings and reported problems with urinary incontinence (n = 719). Analyses indicate that residents of less urbanized and thinly populated nonmetropolitan counties were more likely to have a nursing home admission than elders in any other residential context. More importantly, these residential differences persisted in multivariate logistic regression models after controls were introduced for sociodemographic characteristics, measures of health status, and indicators of the social support networks of the elders.  相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVES: To examine the relationship between diurnal urine volume and plasma arginine vasopressin levels (AVP) in nursing home residents with nighttime urinary incontinence and a comparison group of frail but nondemented, continent geriatric board and care residents. DESIGN: Case series. SETTING: Four nursing homes and two board and care facilities. PARTICIPANTS: Sixty-two nursing home residents and 27 board and care residents. MEASUREMENTS: Daytime (7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.) and nighttime (7:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m.) urine volumes of incontinent nursing home residents were measured over 3 days and 3 nights by reweighing preweighed adults diapers and toileting inserts emptied by research staff for the comparison group. AVP levels were drawn in the early morning (5:00 a.m. to 7:00 a.m.) before subjects arose and in the evening after an hour of lying in bed (8:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m.), and plasma levels were determined by radioimmunoassay. RESULTS: Half of the nursing home residents and 82% of the comparison group had night/total urine volume ratios > or = 50%. Forty-nine percent of the total of 89 subjects had undetectable morning AVP levels, 61% had undetectable evening AVP levels, and 42% had undetectable AVP levels in both morning and evening. There were no significant differences in AVP levels between those with night/total urine volume ratios > or = 50% and < 50% in either the nursing home or comparison groups though the small number of comparison group subjects with ratios < 50% may have limited our statistical power to detect differences. CONCLUSION: Our data suggest that a substantial proportion of both nursing home residents with nighttime incontinence and frail geriatric patients with a reversal of the normal diurnal pattern of urine excretion have an accompanying deficiency in AVP production and/or secretion. More detailed physiologic studies are needed to understand better the pathophysiology of geriatric nocturia and nighttime incontinence and the role that AVP deficiency may play in these conditions. Until such studies are carried out, we do not recommend the routine use of exogenous AVP for geriatric patients with unexplained nocturnal polyuria.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND: Outbreaks of pneumococcal disease are uncommon and have occurred mainly in institutional settings. Epidemic, invasive, drug-resistant pneumococcal disease has not been seen among adults in the United States. In February 1996, there was an outbreak of multidrug-resistant pneumococcal pneumonia among the residents of a nursing home in rural Oklahoma. METHODS: We obtained nasopharyngeal swabs for culture from residents and employees. Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates were serotyped and compared by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. A retrospective cohort study was conducted to identify factors associated with colonization and disease. RESULTS: Pneumonia developed in 11 of 84 residents (13 percent), 3 of whom died. Multidrug-resistant S. pneumoniae, serotype 23F, was isolated from blood and sputum from 7 of the 11 residents with pneumonia (64 percent) and from nasopharygeal specimens from 17 of the 74 residents tested (23 percent) and 2 of the 69 employees tested (3 percent). All the serotype 23F isolates were identical according to pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Recent use of antibiotics was associated with both colonization (relative risk, 2.3; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.3 to 4.2) and disease (relative risk, 3.6; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.2 to 10.8). Only three residents (4 percent) had undergone pneumococcal vaccination. After residents received pneumococcal vaccine and prophylactic antibiotics, there were no additional cases of pneumonia, and the rates of carriage decreased substantially. CONCLUSIONS: In this outbreak a single pneumococcal strain was disseminated among the residents and employees of a nursing home. The high prevalence of colonization with a virulent organism in an unvaccinated population contributed to the high attack rate. Clusters of pneumococcal disease may be underrecognized in nursing homes, and wider use of pneumococcal vaccine is important to prevent institutional outbreaks of drug-resistant S. pneumoniae infection.  相似文献   

12.
The nursing home plays an increasing role as domicile in the last period of life. The following investigation is an assessment of the mortality after entering a nursing home, and an analysis of the mental and physical condition of the residents with the goal of being able to differentiate at admission to a nursing home between short-term and long-term "survivors". Of 317 nursing home residents, the initial physical examination upon admission was investigated retrospectively. The nursing home residents were divided into six groups according to their survival time: survival-time up to 1 week, > 1 week to 1 month, > 1 month to 6 month, > 6 month to 1 year, > 1 year to 5 years, and > 5 years. The mean age of the group studied at admission was 80 years; 75% of the residents were transferred from a hospital. On the average, six diseases or chronic disabilities per patient were diagnosed upon admission to the nursing home. The mean survival time was 2.7 years. The initial phase after admission was the most critical period with a high mortality in the first six months (41% of all nursing home residents); of these, 81% had died already within the first month. The assessment criteria, i. e., the level of communicative abilities, orientation, mobility, and urinary/fecal continence, were found to bear a close relation to survival time. Thus, an important prognostic role as "survival predictors" can be ascribed to these factors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the predictability of a pneumonia prognosis index in nursing home residents with pneumonia and to use the index to account for acute severity of pneumonia before comparing the short-term outcome of residents with pneumonia treated with intravenous antibiotic therapy in two different settings: an inpatient geriatrics unit and a nursing home DESIGN: A retrospective chart review of 158 episodes of nursing home-acquired pneumonia treated initially with intravenous antibiotics; 100 episodes were treated in an inpatient acute geriatrics service (AGS), and 58 were treated completely in a nursing home (Nursing Home group) SETTING: The AGS is a 20-bed unit within a 400-bed, public, university-affiliated hospital. The Nursing Home group consisted of residents of two nonproprietary nursing homes. PARTICIPANTS: Nursing home residents with radiographically proven pneumonia who had at least one of the following signs/symptoms: cough, fever, purulent sputum, respiratory rate > or = 25 per minute, localized auscultatory findings, or pleuritic pain. MEASUREMENTS: The pneumonia prognosis index was calculated for each resident at the time of diagnosis of pneumonia; the index has been validated as a predictor of hospital outcome in patients with community-acquired pneumonia and is also considered a measure of acute severity of pneumonia. Status (alive or dead) of each resident at 30 days after diagnosis was the major dependent variable RESULTS: Mean (+/-SD) duration of antibiotic therapy for the Nursing Home group (10.7+/-4.5 days) was not significantly different from that of the AGS group (9.6+/-3.4 days; P = .26). The pneumonia prognosis index stratified the 158 episodes of pneumonia into low- and high-risk groups for 30-day mortality; the mortality rates in each risk strata were not significantly different from those reported in the original derivation and validation studies of the index. In addition, the distribution of episodes among the risk strata of the index was not significantly different for the two study groups, which was an indication that the two groups were similar in terms of acute severity of pneumonia. Thirty-day mortality was not significantly different between the two groups: AGS, 21% and Nursing Home, 24.1% (P = .66). CONCLUSION: The pneumonia prognosis index seems to have the same capability for predicting the outcome in nursing home residents with pneumonia as in residents with community-acquired pneumonia. The index is also a measure of acute pneumonia severity. Nursing home residents with pneumonia, even those who are most acutely ill, can be treated successfully with intravenous therapy in the nursing home; their 30-day mortality was no different than that of those with the same acute severity of illness who were admitted to a hospital for treatment.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
This study is the first part of a larger research project concerned with disruptive behaviour and the use of physical restraints on elderly nursing home residents. This paper is focused on the types and prevalence of disruptive behaviour among elderly residents, nurses' experiences and the types of nursing interventions employed. Data was collected from nurses of varying qualifications (n = 173) in seven Swiss nursing homes by using a questionnaire. The most frequent behavioural problems reported by nurses were mobility, incontinence, getting dressed, verbal communication, passivity, withdrawal and continual requests. Nurses found physical aggression, continual shouting and verbal abuse the most difficult to manage with. The results also indicated that experiences varied between nurses. In particular, nursing staff always considered disruptive behaviour more disruptive against other residents rather then against themselves. The most frequently used interventions against disruptive behaviour were considering residents' wants and needs, getting close, adjustment to residents' background and organisation of activities. Physical and chemical restraints were also used.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
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   

18.
19.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the preferences of nursing home residents regarding the use of tube feedings and to characterize the clinical, functional, and psychosocial factors that are associated with preferences. DESIGN: In-person survey. SETTING: Forty-nine randomly selected nursing homes. PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS: Three hundred seventy-nine randomly selected, decisionally capable, nursing home residents. MAIN RESULTS: Thirty-three percent of participants would prefer tube feedings if no longer able to eat because of permanent brain damage. Factors positively associated with preferences for tube feedings include male gender. African-American race, never having discussed treatment preferences with family members or health care providers, never having signed an advance directive, and believing that tube feeding preferences will be respected by the nursing home staff. Twenty-five percent of the participants changed from preferring tube feedings to not preferring tube feedings on learning that physical restraints are sometimes applied during the tube feeding process. CONCLUSIONS: Demographic and social factors are associated with preferences for tube feedings. The provision of information about the potential use of physical restraint altered a proportion of nursing home residents' treatment preferences.  相似文献   

20.
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   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号