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1.
OBJECTIVES: To describe the changes in psychoactive drug use in nursing homes after implementation of physical restraint reduction interventions and mandates of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 (OBRA '87). METHODS: A secondary analysis was conducted using data from a controlled clinical trial that took place in three nursing homes: a control home, one that received an educational intervention, and one that received an educational/consultation intervention. All three homes were influenced by the OBRA mandates. Complete pre- and 6 months' post-intervention data on use of psychoactive drugs and physical restraints were available for 446 resident subjects. Changes were first analyzed with the resident subjects as the unit of analysis and then using the nursing home ward (n = 16) as the unit of analysis. RESULTS: While physical restraint use declined in the home that received the educational/consultation intervention, neither neuroleptic nor benzodiazepine use increased in any of the homes after the interventions. The percentage of residents taking neuroleptics declined in the control home (18.6% to 11.3%, P = .014). Benzodiazepine use, which was more prevalent than described previously in the literature, declined in all three homes (P < .001). Of those residents whose physical restraints were discontinued, only 2% were started on neuroleptics. When the effect of OBRA mandates on appropriateness of neuroleptic use was examined, the percentage of residents on neuroleptics who lacked an OBRA-approved indication declined from 21.3% to 14.6% in the total sample, and from 39.9% to 8% in the control home. CONCLUSIONS: Interventions to reduce physical restraint did not lead to an increase in psychoactive drug use; further, reduction in both can occur simultaneously. OBRA mandates regarding psychoactive drug use were not uniformly effective, but appear, at minimum, to have increased awareness of the indications for neuroleptics.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Changes in the use of psychotropic drugs in a large nursing home were examined both in terms of usage for the total facility and in longitudinal changes within individuals. Data for the nursing home showed a gradual increase in use of antidepressants; a decrease in use of antianxiety medications and of sedative-hypnotics. Changes in the number of residents prescribed antipsychotics were not marked. Data within residents showed a great variability in number of psychotropic drugs used, in number of changes in dosage, and in specific patterns of medication change. The first drug change after admission (excluding day of admission) was more likely to involve initiation rather than discontinuation of psychotropic drugs. The medications studied were used over 4–7 months on the average, covering 20–30% of the resident's nursing home stay. The findings suggest that there is continued monitoring of psychotropic medications in the nursing home. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

4.
This study is an extension of previous observational work on the social ecology of dependence and independence in the institutionalized elderly. Observations of everyday, naturally occurring interactions between elderly residents of two different long-term institutions and their social partners were extended such that, aside from the identification of type of behavior, the dyadic form and continuity of each behavior was specified. The following were among the major results: (a) Previously found interaction patterns between elderly residents and their social partners, replicated in both a nursing home and a home for the chronically ill, supported the notion of discrepant social ecologies for dependent versus independent behaviors of residents; (b) specification of each behavioral act as to its dyadic form underscored the fact that the interactions were controlled largely by social partners and not by the elderly residents; (c) coding continuity or discontinuity of behavior suggested that independent behaviors were maintained by chaining; and (d) elderly residents in the home for the chronically ill evinced, as expected, more dependence-related behaviors. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

5.
In this study, two cases were used to examine the potential of behavioral analysis as an intervention to decrease disruptive behaviors of institutionalized individuals with dementia. Behavioral modeling was used to teach the principles of behavioral analysis. The nurses observed a behavior change plan implemented by the investigator, revised the plan based on behavioral analysis techniques, and subsequently implemented the revised behavioral strategies. The patients' disruptive behaviors decreased markedly when the behavioral intervention was implemented. Patients resumed disruptive behaviors when care was provided without the behavioral plan. The findings suggest the need to address interventions in nursing research, education, and practice that use behavioral analysis to reduce disruptive behaviors in individuals with dementia.  相似文献   

6.
The meaning of medication and the way in which people use medicines has been the focus of a number of studies in recent years. However, there has been little attention directed to the meaning and management of neuroleptic medication by people who have received a diagnosis of schizophrenia. This topic is highly relevant to policy because of the central role given to neuroleptics in contemporary mental health and community care services. Using data from in-depth interviews with people with a diagnosis of schizophrenia we explore patients reasons for taking neuroleptics and the ways in which patients self-regulate their medication. The data suggest that the main utility of taking neuroleptic medication is to control specific symptoms and to gain personal control over managing symptoms. The costs of taking medication were side-effects which at times equalised or outweighed the positive gains of the neuroleptic medication. Patient accounts suggest that everyday medication practices are to a significant degree related to a policy context which stresses the need to survey and control the behaviour of people living in the community and the wider meaning and symbolic significance that schizophrenia has for patients in their everyday lives. For this reason, self regulatory action in this group of patients tends to be less evident and the threat of external social control greater than patients taking medication for other chronic conditions. The findings suggest the need to develop a collaborative patient-centred model of medication management for patients diagnosed with schizophrenia.  相似文献   

7.
OBJECTIVE: The authors examined the association between three lifetime medication variables (cumulative amount of neuroleptics, number of interruptions in neuroleptic treatment, cumulative amount of anticholinergics) and the occurrence and severity of tardive dyskinesia. METHOD: The study was conducted in the only psychiatric hospital of a well-defined catchment area (the Netherlands Antilles). For all patients who had a history of taking neuroleptics for at least 3 months and were currently using neuroleptics (N = 133, mean age = 51.5 years), the presence and severity of tardive dyskinesia were measured with the Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale. RESULTS: Of the three lifetime medication variables, only the number of neuroleptic interruptions was significantly related to tardive dyskinesia. The risk of tardive dyskinesia was three times as great for patients with more than two neuroleptic interruptions as for patients with two or fewer interruptions. CONCLUSIONS: This finding supports the schizophrenia protocol of long-term neuroleptic treatment rather than targeted or intermittent neuroleptic treatment.  相似文献   

8.
The link between agitated behaviors and cognitive functioning in 408 nursing home residents was examined. Results showed that cognitively impaired residents manifested aggressive behaviors (e.g., cursing, hitting) and physically nonaggressive behaviors (e.g., pacing). The highest levels of physically nonaggressive behaviors were manifested by those residents who presented intermediate levels of impairment in their performance of activities of daily living. Cognitively intact residents exhibited verbally agitated behaviors (e.g., complaining). These findings have important implications for caregivers of agitated nursing home residents. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to examine the impact of the Family Visit Education Program (FVEP) on family members, nursing staff, and nursing home residents with dementia. DESIGN: The study employed a 2 x 3 single-blind, randomized control group design with two study conditions, FVEP or usual care (UC), and three times of measurement, baseline, 3-months, and 6-months. SETTING: The study was conducted in five skilled-care nursing homes that ranged in size from 120 to 300 beds. PARTICIPANTS: Sixty-six residents with dementia and their primary visitor were randomly assigned to FVEP (n = 32) or UC (n = 34). MEASUREMENTS: Residents were assessed for (1) psychosocial functioning, (2) depression, (3) agitated behavior, and (4) degree of positive social interaction. Nursing staff were assessed for changes in the time and methods used to manage problem behaviors. Visitors were assessed for (1) dementia management skills, (2) extent of perceived caregiving hassles, and (3) visit satisfaction. RESULTS: FVEP was effective for reducing residents' problem behaviors and for decreasing their symptoms of depression and irritability. It was also effective for improving the way family members and other visitors communicated with residents, but, with the exception of reducing the use of mechanical restraints, it was not effective in changing nurses' management of residents' behavior problems. CONCLUSIONS: It is possible to educate family members to communicate and interact more effectively with nursing home residents with dementia. This has beneficial effects on residents but not on nursing staff's management of problem behaviors.  相似文献   

10.
11.
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   

12.
PURPOSE: The investigation aimed at assessing the prevalence of depression among residents in a nursing home. METHODS: In a rural area of Germany a representative sample was examined by means of the "Brief Assessment Interview" (BAI). RESULTS: 17% had a depressive disorder without dementia, 9% had a mild dementia syndrome and a depressive disorder; a total of 47% suffered from symptoms of dementia without depression. Most of the patients were treated by general practitioners or internists. 11% of the patients with depression were treated with antidepressants, 19% with neuroleptics, 17% with minor tranquillizers, and 17% with hypnotics. Only 20% of the depressive patients had ever been examined by a psychiatrist, 4% underwent an actual psychiatric therapy. CONCLUSION: Elderly patients with depressive disorders living in nursing homes need a more specific psychiatric treatment.  相似文献   

13.
14.
BACKGROUND: We sought to quantify the relationship between antipsychotic drug use and clinical evidence of extrapyramidal dysfunction in a large population of elderly nursing home patients. METHODS: Subjects were 251 residents (mean age, 84.1 years; range, 65 to 105 years) who were taking psychoactive drugs in 12 long-term care facilities. Patient characteristics and all medication use (both scheduled and as needed) were measured during a 1-month observation period. We then performed neuropsychological and functional testing on residents who received any psychoactive medications during the study month. The presence of rigidity, bradykinesia, or masklike facies was assessed in each patient by a research assistant who was unaware of diagnoses and medication use. RESULTS: The parkinsonian signs studied were found in 127 (50.6%) of these residents. Using logistic regression modeling to adjust for potential confounding, we found this outcome to be increased more than threefold in patients who took low-potency neuroleptics (odds ratio [OR], 3.49 for > or = 50 mg/d of chlorpromazine-type drugs; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.28 to 9.57) and more than sixfold for use of 1 mg/d or more of haloperidol (OR, 6.42; 95% CI, 2.16 to 19.04). Age, gender, and use of nonneuroleptic psychoactive drugs were not associated with an increase in parkinsonian signs. CONCLUSIONS: Clinical evidence of extrapyramidal dysfunction is three to six times more common in institutionalized elderly patients given antipsychotic medication than in comparable patients not using such drugs. Its risk is substantially increased even in patients given low-potency chlorpromazine-type drugs, as well as those taking haloperidol. The effect is not explained by age or mental status and is not seen with other psychoactive medications. The expected frequency of parkinsonian symptoms can help to inform the balancing of risks vs therapeutic effect when the use of all drugs in this class is considered.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Thirteen schizophrenic patients who developed abnormal psychotic behavior as an adverse reaction to a neuroleptic are described. A. Three patients showed a marked increase in the psychopathology during neuroleptic treatment. These episodes were treated by decreasing or discontinuing the neuroleptics. They did not respond to anticholinergic durgs nor did they respond to an increase in dosage, (another side effect previously reported and referred to here) indeed this treatment worsened the situation. B. Ten patients showed a mixed picture of catatonic excitement or inhibition on neuroleptics and several developed hallucinatory episodes. All of these exacerbations were terminated by anticholinergic injections. Other more familiar CNS abnormalities produced by neuroleptics are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Many nursing home residents are candidates for antipsychotic pharmacotherapy for dementia-related behavioral disturbances that include physical agitation and aggression, verbal outbursts, anxiety, and depression. These patients are often resistant to or intolerant of standard neuroleptics and are usually receiving multiple medications for concurrent psychiatric or medical conditions. New medications must be carefully considered because they may interact with concurrent medications or aggravate concurrent medical problems. Low doses of risperidone may be better tolerated in the elderly because the drug poses little risk of extrapyramidal side effects or blood disorders. One hundred and nine patients with dementia-related behavioral disturbances were studied in 9 nursing homes; most initially received 0.25 to 0.5 mg of risperidone twice daily. Their behavior was recorded for up to 6 months on questionnaires completed by a nursing staff member at each home. Risperidone was well tolerated overall and nursing staff viewed it as helpful in 38 of 100 patients, moderately helpful in 26, slightly helpful in 17, and not helpful in 19.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVES: The Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST), a comprehensive, one-page order form, was developed to convey preferences for life-sustaining treatments during transfer from one care site to another. This study examined the extent to which the POLST form ensured that nursing home residents' wishes were honored for Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) and requests for transfer only if comfort measures fail. DESIGN: The study used chart record data to follow prospectively a sample of nursing home residents with the POLST. SETTING: Eight geographically diverse, long-term, adult-care facilities in Oregon in which the POLST was in use. PARTICIPANTS: Nursing home residents (n = 180), who had a POLST recording DNR designation and who indicated a desire for transfer only if comfort measures failed, were followed for 1 year. MEASUREMENTS: For all subjects: treatment and disposition after significant health status changes; orders for narcotics and for provision or limitation of aggressive interventions. For hospitalized subjects: diagnosis, medical interventions, and DNR orders. For those who died: cause and location of death, life-sustaining treatments attempted, and comfort measures provided. RESULTS: No study subject received CPR, ICU care, or ventilator support, and only 2% were hospitalized to extend life. Of the 38 subjects who died during the study year, 63% had an order for narcotics, and only two (5%) died in an acute care hospital. A total of 24 subjects (13%) were hospitalized during the year. Hospitalized subjects' mean length of stay was 4.9 days, and the mean rate of hospitalizations for all subjects was 174 per 1000 resident years. In 85% of all hospitalizations, patients were transferred because the nursing home could not control suffering. In 15% of hospitalizations (n = 4), the transfer was to extend life, overriding POLST orders. CONCLUSIONS: POLST orders regarding CPR in nursing home residents in this study were universally respected. Study subjects received remarkably high levels of comfort care and low rates of transfer for aggressive life-extending treatments.  相似文献   

19.
The purpose of this study was to compare striatal D2 dopamine receptor occupancy of various typical neuroleptics and clozapine in relation to the occurrence of extrapyramidal side effects (EPS). Forty-four inpatients with schizophrenia, including 12 patients with schizodominant schizoaffective disorder, were evaluated using 123I-iodobenzamide (IBZM) and single photon emission computed tomography. Striatal D2 dopamine receptor occupancy was estimated by use of a striatal/frontal cortex ratio (ST/FC) of IBZM binding. Fourteen patients were neuroleptic-free and served as controls. Six patients were treated with clozapine and 24 patients were treated with various typical neuroleptics. ST/FC ratios in patients taking typical neuroleptics were significantly lower than those who were neuroleptic free or treated with clozapine. Patients with EPS had lower ST/FC ratios than those without EPS. A significant linear relationship between ST/FC ratios and severity of EPS estimated by the Simpson-Angus-Scale was established (r=-0.51, p=0.041).  相似文献   

20.
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   

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