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Nursing home characteristics and the development of pressure sores and disruptive behaviour

Authors :
Lewis A. Lipsitz
John N. Morris
Monir Hossain
Wee Lock Ooi
Gary H. Brandeis
Source :
Age and Ageing. 28:45-52
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 1999.

Abstract

Objective: to determine how nursing home characteristics affect pressure sores and disruptive behaviour. Method: residents (n = 5518, aged $ 60 years) were selected from 70 nursing homes in the National Health Care chain. Homes were classified as high- or low-risk based on incidence tertiles of pressure sores or disruptive behaviour (1989‐90). Point-prevalence and cumulative incidence of pressure sores and disruptive behaviour were examined along with other functional and service variables. Results: the overall incidence of pressure sores was 11.4% and the relative risk was 4.3 times greater in high- than low-risk homes; for disruptive behaviour, the incidence was 27% and the relative risk was 7.1 times greater in the high-risk group. At baseline, fewer subjects in homes with a high risk of pressure sores were white or in restraints, but more had received physician visits monthly and had had problems with transfers and eating. High-risk homes also had fewer beds and used less non-licensed nursing staff time. At follow-up (1987‐90), 52% of homes in the lowrisk group and 35% of those in the high-risk group had maintained their risk status; low-risk homes were more likely to have rehabilitation and maintenance activities. Having multiple clinical risk factors was associated with more pressure sores in high- (but not low-) risk homes, suggesting a care-burden threshold. By logistic regression, the best predictor of pressure sores was a home’s prior (1987‐88) incidence status. Interestingly, 67% of homes with a high risk of pressure sores were also high-risk for disruptive behaviour, while only 27% of homes with a low risk of pressure sores were high-risk for disruptive behaviour. A threshold effect was also observed between multiple risk factors and behaviour. More homes with a high risk of disruptive behaviour (68%) remained at risk over 4 years, and the best predictor of outcome was a home’s previous morbidity level. Conclusion: nursing-home characteristics may have a greater impact than clinical factors on pressure sores and disruptive behaviour in long-stay, institutionalized elders.

Details

ISSN :
14682834
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Age and Ageing
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8f99ca85446d51f84ddea1a293e9c80b