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1.
ObjectivesPneumonia is a common cause of hospitalization for nursing home residents and has increased as a cause for hospitalization during the COVID-19 pandemic. Risks of hospitalization, including significant functional decline, are important considerations when deciding whether to treat a resident in the nursing home or transfer to a hospital. Little is known about postdischarge functional status, relative to baseline, of nursing home residents hospitalized for pneumonia. We sought to determine the risk of severe functional limitation or death for nursing home residents following hospitalization for treatment of pneumonia.DesignRetrospective cohort study.Setting and ParticipantsParticipants included Medicare enrollees aged ≥65 years, hospitalized from a nursing home in the United States between 2013 and 2014 for pneumonia.MethodsActivities of daily living (ADL), patient sociodemographics, and comorbidities were obtained from the Minimum Data Set (MDS), an assessment tool completed for all nursing home residents. MDS assessments from prior to and following hospitalization were compared to assess for functional decline. Following hospital discharge, all patients were evaluated for a composite outcome of severe disability (≥4 ADL limitations) following hospitalization or death prior to completion of a postdischarge MDS.ResultsIn 2013 and 2014, a total of 241,804 nursing home residents were hospitalized for pneumonia, of whom 89.9% (192,736) experienced the composite outcome of severe disability or death following hospitalization for pneumonia. Although we found that prehospitalization functional and cognitive status were associated with developing the composite outcome, 53% of residents with no prehospitalization ADL limitation, and 82% with no cognitive limitation experienced the outcome.Conclusions and ImplicationsHospitalization for treatment of pneumonia is associated with significant risk of functional decline and death among nursing home residents, even those with minimal deficits prior to hospitalization. Nursing homes need to prepare for these outcomes in both advance care planning and in rehabilitation efforts.  相似文献   

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ObjectivesTo examine the relationship between cognitive status and falls with and without injury among older adults during the first 18 days of a skilled nursing facility (SNF) and determine if this association is mediated by limitations in activities of daily living (ADL) and impaired balance.DesignCohort study of Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries admitted to an SNF between October 1, 2016, and September 31, 2017.Settings and Participants815,927 short-stay nursing home residents admitted to an SNF within 3 days of hospital discharge.MethodsCognitive status at SNF admission was classified as intact, mild, moderate, or severe impairment. Residents were classified as having no falls, a fall without injury, and a fall with a minor or major injury. We used ordinal logistic regression to model the association between cognitive status and falls adjusting for resident and facility characteristics. A causal mediation analysis was used to test for the mediating effects of ADL limitations and impaired balance on the association between cognitive status and falls with an injury.ResultsMild, moderate, and severe cognitive impairment were associated with 1.72 (95% CI: 1.68-1.75), 2.72 (95% CI: 2.66-2.78), and 2.61 (95% CI: 2.48-2.75) higher odds of being in a higher fall severity category, respectively, compared to being cognitively unimpaired. Greater ADL limitations and impaired balance were significantly associated with falls, but each mediated the association between cognitive status and falls by less than 2%.Conclusions and ImplicationsOlder adults with cognitive impairment are more likely to experience a fall during an SNF stay. ADL limitations and impaired balance are risk factors for falls but may not contribute to the increased fall risk for SNF residents with cognitive impairment. Continued research is needed to better understand the risk factors for falls among SNF residents with cognitive impairment.  相似文献   

4.
OBJECTIVE: The calculation of body composition using bioelectrical impedance analysis is difficult in the elderly because most equations have been found to be inadequate, especially in the malnourished elderly. We therefore evaluated the use of bioelectrical impedance vector analysis in elderly nursing home residents. METHODS: One hundred twelve nursing home residents were included in the study (34 men, 78 women, age 85.1 y, age range 79.1-91.4 y). Nutritional status was determined by the Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA), functional status was assessed by handgrip strength, knee extension strength, and Barthel's index, and bioelectrical impedance analysis was performed using Nutriguard M (Data Input, Darmstadt, Germany). RESULTS: Twenty-two nursing home residents were classified as well nourished (MNA I), 80 were considered to be at nutritional risk (MNA II), and 10 were classified as malnourished (MNA III). Handgrip strength, knee extension strength, and Barthel's index were lower in MNA II and MNA III than in MNA I. Phase angle also decreased significantly with the MNA (4.0, 3.8-4.7 degrees; 3.7, 3.3-4.3 degrees; and 2.9, 2.6-3.5 degrees). There was a significant displacement of the mean vector in MNA II and MNA III compared with MNA I. CONCLUSION: The bioelectrical impedance vector analysis resistance/reactance graph could represent a valuable tool to assess changes in body cell mass and hydration status in elderly nursing home residents.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND: Several studies have shown that malnutrition is common among nursing home residents. AIM: We hypothesized that addition of natural energy-dense ingredients to a standard diet would improve voluntary energy intake and ability to perform activities of daily living (ADL) and decrease infections in elderly residents under nursing home care. METHODS: Thirty-five residents in a municipality nursing home (median age 83 years) were served either a standard diet (1600 kcal/day) (control group, n=18) or the same meals fortified with natural energy-dense ingredients (2100 kcal/day) (experimental group, n=17). Energy intake and ADL function were measured before and after the intervention. All episodes of infection were registered. Non-parametric statistics were used. RESULTS: Energy intake increased in the experimental group from 23.5 (21.3-28.5) kcal/kg/body weight before, to 31.9 (29.7-33.7) kcal/kg/body weight during the intervention (P<0.001). There was no change in energy intake in the control group. ADL function in the experimental group was unchanged, while it decreased significantly in the control group (P<0.001). The number of infections tended to be lower in the experimental group than in the control group (5 vs 13). The cost for the energy-dense ingredients was approx. 0.11 EUR per resident and day. CONCLUSIONS:Addition of natural energy-dense ingredients to regular meals is an inexpensive way to improve voluntary energy intake in elderly nursing home residents, a treatment that was accompanied by maintained ADL function.  相似文献   

6.
ObjectiveThis study examined the impact of hospice enrollment on the probabilities of hospital and nursing home admissions among a sample of frail dual-eligible assisted living (AL) residents.DesignThe study used a retrospective cohort design. We estimated bivariate probit models with 2 binary outcome variables: any hospital admissions and any nursing home admissions after assisted living enrollment.SettingA total of 328 licensed AL communities accepting Medicaid waivers in Florida.ParticipantsWe identified all newly admitted dual-eligible AL residents in Florida between January and June of 2003 who had complete state assessment data (n = 658) and followed them for 6 to 12 months.MeasurementsUsing the Andersen behavioral model, predisposing (age, gender, race), enabling (marital status, available caregiver, hospice use), and need (ADL/IADL, comorbidity conditions, and incontinence) characteristics were included as predictors of 2 binary outcomes (hospital and nursing home admission). Demographics, functional status, and caregiver availability were obtained from the state client assessment database. Data on diagnosis and hospital, nursing home, and hospice use were obtained from Medicare and Medicaid claims. Death dates were obtained from the state vital statistics death certificate data.ResultsThe mean age of the study sample was 81.5 years. Three-fourths were female and 63% were White. The average resident had a combined ADL/IADL dependency score of 11.49. Fifty-eight percent of the sample had dementia. During the average 8.9-month follow-up period, 6.8% were enrolled in hospice and 10.2% died. Approximately 33% of the sample had been admitted into a hospital and 20% had been admitted into a nursing home. Bivariate probit models simultaneously predicting the likelihood of hospital and nursing home admissions showed that hospice enrollment was associated with lower likelihood of hospital (OR = 0.24, P < .01) and nursing home admissions (OR = 0.56, P < .05). Significant predictors of hospital admissions included higher Charlson Comorbidity Index score and incontinence. Predictors of nursing home admissions included higher Charlson Comorbidity Index score, the absence of available informal caregiver, and incontinence.ConclusionsHospice enrollment was associated with a lower likelihood of hospital and nursing home admissions, and, thus, may have allowed AL residents in need of palliative care to remain in the AL community. AL providers should support and facilitate hospice care among older frail dual-eligible AL residents. More research is needed to examine the impact of hospice care on resident quality of life and total health care expenditures among AL residents.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: There are over 16 000 nursing homes in the United States (US), among which approximately 70% of residents are cognitively impaired. Reflecting this, approximately 20% of US nursing homes maintain Special Dementia Care Units (SCUs). SCUs supposedly provide more staff time and more specialized staff assignments to residents than do traditional care units. AIMS OF THE STUDY: This paper addresses the issues of staff time and assignment: do the costs of personal care inputs differ according to whether they are provided by SCUs or in traditional care settings? Related to this, are differences associated with the different settings, or are they accounted for by resident characteristics within the settings? METHODS: Given the bias generally associated with collection of staff time data, the author developed (supported by the Health Care Financing Administration and the National Institute on Aging) and used in this study a barcode-based system ('InfoAide'). Using InfoAide, each provider automatically recorded task- and resident-specific time expenditure data which were subsequently monetized, using prevailing local wage rates. Individual resident personal characteristics and status data were provided by another simultaneous study of SCU impacts among the same residents. Regression analysis (MANCOVA for significantly correlated dependent variables) was used to examine the relationships between cost and SCU/traditional status, and individual resident characteristics, separately for each category of provider. RESULTS: Controlling for resident characteristics, the cost of aide care is significantly (positively) related (p <=0.01) to SCU status. Cognitive impairment, ADL impairment and being restrained are also related to higher aide care cost (p <=0.05, p <=0.01, and p <=0.05, respectively). The same is generally true of Speech Therapy, Social Service and care by licensed practical nurses, although the differences between SCU and traditional care units are essentially trivial - and there are no SCU/traditional care differences for registered nurses. DISCUSSION: SCU/traditional unit status, even when combined with the central resident covariates, explains very little variance in service costs, other than among nursing aides; in separate MR analyses in which monetized service time was the dependent variable, the cumulative adjusted R2 among aides was 0.37; for each of the other categories of service provider, the adjusted R2 was less than 0.10. There were differences (particularly in cognitive and ADL impairment) between SCU and non-SCU residents; these differences were related to differences in basic services which were, in turn, provided primarily by aides. The increased level of care provided in SCUs is attributable primarily to nursing aides. However, there is relatively little (albeit statistically significant) variation in more 'elective'services according to individual characteristics or to SCU versus traditional unit placement. This discussion is limited by the absence of analyses of possible interactions among variables, and by the cross-sectional nature of the data presented here. IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH CARE PROVISION AND USE: This absence of a substantial relationship between SCU/traditional status suggests that dichotomization between SCU and traditional care is misplaced, and that more attention should perhaps be given to the targeting and tailoring of services related to individual gradations of impairment and need. IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH POLICY FORMULATIONS: A very considerable literature has developed recently pertaining to Special versus Traditional care for persons with dementing illness. These data suggest that this is not a fruitful distinction, and that more effort should be devoted to defining and quantifying the elements and quality of care provided to nursing home residents. IMPLICATIONS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH: Further research is needed into the components of optimal quality care for demented nursing home residents, and into the interaction among these components as they relate to resident outcomes.  相似文献   

8.
This study's objective was to examine the relationships between rural residence and availability of nursing home and home health care to functional disability at the time of nursing home admission. Secondary data were obtained from the Minimum Data Set (MDS) 2.0 for Nebraska for 3,443 rural and 1,296 urban older people admitted to nursing facilities. Data from the MDS were merged with county-level data on home health agencies and nursing homes in Nebraska. The relationship of rurality of nursing home residents' prior residence and availability of nursing home and home health care to functional status at admission, controlling for demographic and health characteristics of older people, was estimated using multiple linear regression with robust variance estimates. After taking account of demographic and health status characteristics, rural residence and availability of home health and nursing home care had nonsignificant effects on functional status at admission. The findings indicate that functional disability at admission is associated with specific diseases and medical conditions, cognitive status, gender, living arrangements and marital arrangements. Rural older people are not at higher risk of admission at lower levels of functional disability compared to their urban counterparts.  相似文献   

9.
PURPOSE: The Hispanic population in the United States is the fastest growing minority group, yet there is little understanding of the disability patterns that occur as this population ages. We conducted a cross-sectional study to define the prevalence of limitations of activities of daily living (ADL) and measures of observed function. METHODS: We censussed two rural counties in southern Colorado and selected a stratified sample of both Hispanic and non-Hispanic white (NHW) residents; 81.6% completed the protocol. RESULTS: Among the 1250 subjects aged 65 years and older, Hispanic elderly living in the community had greater ADL disability than NHW subjects, both for any difficulty (p = 0.006), and for needing assistance (p = 0.002). Hispanic persons were less likely to reside in nursing homes (3.4%) compared with NHW persons (9.3%). Hispanic elderly had excess prevalence of dependent ADL tasks (needs assistance or unable to do), (age, gender-adjusted odds ratio = 1.39, 95% CI = 1.01-1.92) in community dwelling and nursing home residents combined. There was no Hispanic excess of less severe difficulty compared with NHW persons, and there was a similar prevalence of limitation on observed functional tasks (timed walk, stooping, rising from a chair) in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: There was a modest Hispanic excess of reported dependent ADL limitation, and no excess of observed functional difficulties. Hispanics enter older age with much less income and education, yet they do not have a marked excess prevalence of limitations in activities of daily living when compared with NHW persons living in the same area.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND. Little is known about the factors that predict whether nursing home residents with lower respiratory infection (LRI) will do well or poorly, although this information is critically important when making treatment decisions. METHODS. Using nursing home and hospital medical records, we performed a case-control study to identify risk factors for death from LRI among residents of a 110-bed, midwestern community nursing home. Three experienced geriatricians aided in the development of an operational definition of an LRI. In a 3 1/2-year period, we identified 26 cases in which the patients died from LRI and 66 control episodes in which the patients recovered from LRI. RESULTS. Compared with those who survived, those who died were 14 times more likely to be totally dependent with respect to activities of daily living (ADL) than the group of patients least ALD-dependent (odds ratio [OR] = 14; 95% confidence interval [95% CI] = 2.85 to 68.87). After adjusting for ADL, mortality was significantly decreased when a broad-spectrum oral antibiotic (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, cefaclor, amoxicillin-clavulanate, or ciprofloxacin) was used as the initial therapy (OR = .14; 95% CI = .02 to .81). CONCLUSIONS. Better functional status and initial therapy with broad-spectrum oral antibiotics were strong predictors of surviving an LRI in this population of nursing home patients. The antibiotic effect may be a treatment effect or the consequence of underlying factors leading physicians to select particular antibiotics; however, it appears possible to identify low-risk persons who do not require the aggressive treatment and hospitalization that is often recommended for these patients. An approach to the treatment of nursing home LRI is suggested.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE. This study examines the effects of resident and facility characteristics on the probability of nursing home residents receiving treatment by mental health professionals. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING. The study uses data from the Institutional Population Component of the 1987 National Medical Expenditure Survey, a secondary data source containing data on 3,350 nursing home residents living in 810 nursing homes as of January 1, 1987. STUDY DESIGN. Andersen's health services use model (1968) is used to estimate a multivariate logistic equation for the effects of independent variables on the probability that a resident has received services from mental health professionals. Important variables include resident race, sex, and age; presence of several behaviors and reported mental illnesses; and facility ownership, facility size, and facility certification. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS. Data on 188 residents were excluded from the sample because information was missing on several important variables. For some additional variables residents who had missing information were coded as negative responses. This left 3,162 observations for analysis in the logistic regressions. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS. Older residents and residents with more ADL limitations are much less likely than other residents to have received treatment from a mental health professional. Residents with reported depression, schizophrenia, or psychoses, and residents who are agitated or hallucinating are more likely to have received treatment. Residents in government nursing homes, homes run by chains, and homes with low levels of certification are less likely to have received treatment. CONCLUSIONS. Few residents receive treatment from mental health professionals despite need. Older, physically disabled residents need special attention. Care in certain types of facilities requires further study. New regulations mandating treatment for mentally ill residents will demand increased attention from nursing home administrators and mental health professionals.  相似文献   

12.
Dey AN 《Advance data》1997,(289):1-8
OBJECTIVE: This report presents the sociodemographic characteristics, functional dependencies in the activities of daily living (ADL) and instrumental activities of daily living (IADL), dental status, primary admission diagnosis, types of services used, and source of payment of elderly nursing home residents. METHODS: The data used for this report are from the National Center for Health Statistics' 1995 National Nursing Home Survey's (NNHS) sample of current residents age 65 years and above. The 1995 NNHS is the fourth annual survey of nursing homes. The first survey was conducted from August 1973 through April 1974, the second was conducted from May through December 1977, and the third was conducted from August 1985 through January 1986. The 1995 NNHS was conducted from July 1995 through December 1995. RESULTS: The overall results of the survey indicate that elderly nursing home residents were predominantly women, 75 years old and over, white, non-Hispanic, and widowed. A large portion of residents needed assistance in their ADL's and IADL's. A shifting of the primary source of payment to Medicaid occurred among residents who used Medicare as their source of payment at the time of admission.  相似文献   

13.
The functional capacity of two different non-institutionalized elderly populations and the resources available were compared in the same geographical area at 10 years' interval. The study shows that a 1.5-fold increase in the non-institutionalized population aged 75 or over combined with a fixed number of institutional beds in 10 years resulted in more disability among the elderly at home. The nursing home population at the latter point of time was older and showed a higher mortality, indicating increased pressure and selection to the nursing home. The first study comprised 82.8% and the second 89.2% of all community-living persons aged 75 or over. In 1988, the functional status of the aged living at home was significantly lower than in 1978, in 8 out of 12 functional activities of daily living (ADL). The Basic ADL Index decreased significantly both in men and in women, and mobility also deteriorated. The Instrumental ADL Index decreased significantly in men, while the Index was equally poor in women in both interviews. The poor functional status of the elderly in 1988 was accompanied by moving to the town centre and considerably improved housing standards. Home care services had more than doubled, and home nursing visits had also increased.  相似文献   

14.
ObjectivesNationwide among nursing home residents, receipt of the influenza vaccine is 8 to 9 percentage points lower among blacks than among whites. The objective of this study was to determine if the national inequity in vaccination is because of the characteristics of facilities and/or residents.DesignCross-sectional study with multilevel modeling.Setting and ParticipantsStates in which 1% or more of nursing home residents were black and the difference in influenza vaccination coverage between white and black nursing home residents was 1 percentage point or higher (n = 39 states and the District of Columbia). Data on residents (n = 2,359,321) were obtained from the Centers for Medicare &; Medicaid Service’s Minimum Data Set for October 1, 2008, through March 31, 2009.MeasurementsResidents’ influenza vaccination status (vaccinated, refused vaccine, or not offered vaccination).ResultsStates with higher overall influenza vaccination coverage among nursing home residents had smaller racial inequities. In nursing homes with higher proportions of black residents, vaccination coverage was lower for both blacks and whites. The most dramatic inequities existed between whites in nursing homes with 0% blacks (L1) and blacks in nursing homes with 50% or more blacks (L5) in states with overall racial inequities of 10 percentage points or more. In these states, more black nursing home residents lived in nursing homes with 50% or more blacks (L5); in general, the same homes with low overall coverage.ConclusionInequities in influenza vaccination coverage among nursing home residents are largely because of low vaccination coverage in nursing homes with a high proportion of black residents. Findings indicate that implementation of culturally appropriate interventions to increase vaccination in facilities with larger proportions of black residents may reduce the racial gap in influenza vaccination as well as increase overall state-level vaccination.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVES: This report presents estimates of nursing home facilities, their current residents and discharges in the United States. Data are presented on facility characteristics, demographic characteristics, utilization measures, health and functional status of current residents, and discharges. METHODS: Data used in this report are based on data collected from the 1997 National Nursing Home Survey. The survey collects information about providers and recipients of care from nursing home facilities.  相似文献   

16.
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to develop a multivariate fall risk assessment model beyond the current fall Resident Assessment Protocol (RAP) triggers for nursing home residents using the Minimum Data Set (MDS). DESIGN: Retrospective, clustered secondary data analysis. Setting: National Veterans Health Administration (VHA) long-term care nursing homes (N = 136). PARTICIPANTS: The study population consisted of 6577 national VHA nursing home residents who had an annual assessment during FY 2005, identified from the MDS, as well as an earlier annual or admission assessment within a 1-year look-back period. MEASUREMENT: A dichotomous multivariate model of nursing home residents coded with a fall on selected fall risk characteristics from the MDS, estimated with general estimation equations (GEE). RESULTS: There were 17 170 assessments corresponding to 6577 long-term care nursing home residents. The increased odds ratio (OR) of being classified as a faller relative to the omitted "dependent" category of activities of daily living (ADL) ranged from OR = 1.35 for "limited" ADL category up to OR = 1.57 for "extensive-2" ADL (P < .0001). Unsteady gait more than doubles the odds of being a faller (OR = 2.63, P < .0001). The use of assistive devices such as canes, walkers, or crutches, or the use of wheelchairs increases the odds of being a faller (OR = 1.17, P < .0005) or (OR = 1.19, P < .0002), respectively. Foot problems may also increase the odds of being a faller (OR = 1.26, P < .0016). Alzheimer's or other dementias also increase the odds of being classified as a faller (OR = 1.18, P < .0219) or (OR=1.22, P < .0001), respectively. In addition, anger (OR = 1.19, P < .0065); wandering (OR = 1.53, P < .0001); or use of antipsychotic medications (OR = 1.15, P < .0039), antianxiety medications (OR = 1.13, P < .0323), or antidepressant medications (OR = 1.39, P < .0001) was also associated with the odds of being a faller. CONCLUSIONS: This national study in one of the largest managed healthcare systems in the United States has empirically confirmed the relative importance of certain risk factors for falls in long-term care settings. The model incorporated an ADL index and adjusted for case mix by including only long-term care nursing home residents. The study offers clinicians practical estimates by combining multiple univariate MDS elements in an empirically based, multivariate fall risk assessment model.  相似文献   

17.
This study investigated regional differences in functional status among aged Medicare beneficiaries in the United States, and the degree to which population risk factors and certain geographic/environmental attributes of communities accounted for the regional differences. Four years of the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey (1992-1995) were pooled together yielding 37,150 person-year observations of functional status for a sample of aged Medicare beneficiaries residing in the community or nursing homes. Multinomial logit models, estimated on a four-category functional status scale, produced strong empirical evidence of substantial regional differences in the prevalence of functional independence, functional limitations, IADL limitations, and ADL limitations, that could not be attributed to regional population composition, socio-demographic factors, lifestyle characteristics, and chronic medical conditions. Although such population risk factors accounted for much of the regional variations in functional status among older men, the notably higher prevalence of IADL and ADL limitations among older women residing in the Deep South could not be similarly attributed to such risk factors. Rather, the empirical results suggest that a significant portion of the harmful effects associated with residence in the Deep South among older women may be attributed to a higher prevalence of residence in counties characterized by lower population density and/or higher poverty concentration.  相似文献   

18.
ObjectivesEnsuring quality of life (QoL) is an important goal of person-centered nursing home care. The provision of person-centered care relies on information captured in the Minimum Data Set 3.0 (MDS). It is unclear to what extent MDS items or QoL-related facility deficiency citations correlate with validated measures of nursing home residents' QoL. This study evaluated correlation among MDS items, facility deficiency citations, and residents’ QoL from 2 states that currently collect these measures.DesignCross-sectional study.Setting and ParticipantsA total of 11,487 long-stay residents in 356 facilities in Minnesota and 13,835 long-stay residents in 851 facilities in Ohio in 2015.MethodsThe outcome, QoL, was measured using validated instruments (Minnesota QoL survey and Ohio Resident Satisfaction Survey). Predictor variables included scores for Preference Assessment Tool (Section F), Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (Section D) for depressive symptoms from MDS, and count of QoL-related facility deficiency citations from the Certification and Survey Provider Enhanced Reporting database. Spearman's ranked test assessed correlation between predictor and outcome variables. Mixed effects models evaluated associations of QoL summary scores with predictor variables, adjusting for resident- and facility-level characteristics, accounting for clustering at the facility level.ResultsIn Minnesota and Ohio, predictor variables (Section F and D items, and facility deficiency citations) correlated significantly but poorly with QoL (coefficients ranging from 0.003 to 0.3, P < .001). In the fully adjusted mixed effects model, all predictor variables, demographics, and functional status explained <21% of the total variance in QoL among residents. These findings were consistent in sensitivity analyses stratified by 1-year length of stay and by diagnosis of dementia.Conclusions and ImplicationsMDS items and facility deficiency citations encapsulate a significant but very small proportion of variance in residents’ QoL. This indicates the need to measure QoL directly among residents, to plan person-centered care, and to evaluate its performance in nursing home facilities.  相似文献   

19.
This paper reports a study of the relationship between the use of physical restraints with psycho-geriatric nursing home residents and the characteristics of organisations and residents. It is hypothesised that impairment in residents and organisational characteristics, such as a high workload of nursing staff and a low full-time equivalent (FTE) ratio on the wards, are associated with increased restraint use. In a cross-sectional study involving 15 Dutch psycho-geriatric nursing home wards, 432 residents were selected for participation, of which 371 actually participated. Restraint status was measured using observations. Other resident characteristics, such as cognitive status, were determined using the Minimum Data Set (MDS). Job characteristics, such as workload, were determined by different self-reported measures. Characteristics of the wards, such as the FTE ratio, were derived from the registration system of the wards. Physical restraints were used with 56% of the psycho-geriatric nursing home residents. Bivariate analysis showed that job and ward characteristics were not associated with restraint use. Bivariate and multilevel analysis showed that residents' characteristics, such as mobility and cognitive status were significantly associated with restraint use. Furthermore, multilevel analysis showed that higher job autonomy experienced by nursing staff and a higher FTE ratio on the wards were also associated with increased restraint use. In conclusion, job and ward characteristics were not as strongly associated as residents' characteristics with restraint use. Impairments in residents, such as immobility, were strongly related to the use of restraints. Therefore, education and support of nursing staff in caring for psycho-geriatric nursing home residents with poor mobility is recommended to reduce the use of physical restraints in nursing homes.  相似文献   

20.
OBJECTIVE: To examine factors affecting the utilization of formal and informal home care services by people with HIV infection. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SETTING: Study participants are adults with HIV infection receiving services at major providers of medical care in ten U.S. cities. Six interviews were conducted over an 18-month period (March 1991 to September 1992). DATA COLLECTION METHODS: Data on home care utilization, personal background characteristics, insurance status, and functional status are based on self-report. Disease stage is based on medical record data. STUDY DESIGN: This is an observational study using a panel survey design. Cross-tabular and longitudinal regression analyses (N = 1,727) were conducted to determine the effects of sociodemographic factors, functional status, disease stage, and insurance status on the receipt of home care from nurses, paraprofessionals, other professional providers, household residents, nonresident family and friends, and volunteers. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Over a 12-month period, 16 percent of respondents received home nursing visits; 11 percent received paraprofessional care (e.g., nurse's aides, helpers); 4 percent received help from volunteers; 11 percent from non-resident family or friends, and 21 percent from household members. Among the subgroup with AIDS (n = 837), corresponding percentages were 29, 20, 7, 17, and 29 percent for each provider type. In multivariate analyses, illness stage and functional status had strong effects on odds of utilization. Blacks and Hispanics were less likely than whites to have nursing care, but racial/ethnic group did not affect receipt of informal care. CONCLUSIONS: Home care utilization is concentrated among people with AIDS, compared to those at less advanced disease stages. In addition to functional limitations, fatigue is associated with the use of home care. Nursing and non-nursing home care have somewhat different correlates. Medicaid may provide better coverage of personal care services than private insurance.  相似文献   

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