SUPPORT FOR FRAIL ELDERLY PERSONS - From Prevention to Palliation
- Conditions
- Frail Elderly Persons
- Interventions
- Behavioral: senior meetingsBehavioral: preventive home visit
- Registration Number
- NCT00877058
- Lead Sponsor
- Vardalinstitutet The Swedish Institute for Health Sciences
- Brief Summary
The present study "Elderly person in the risk zone" form part of the research programme "Support for frail elderly persons - from prevention to palliation" (www. Vardalinstitutet.net) which comprises research into three interventions. A fundamental principle in the research programme is that it comprises interventions addressing frail elderly person in different phases of the disablement process, from elderly persons who are beginning to develop frailty to very frail elderly persons receiving palliative care in the final period of their lives. The interventions also address the different requirements that arise with regard to professional contributions during the various phases of the ageing and disease process, ranging from health promotion to a need for an increasing degree of medical care, nursing, special care and rehabilitation, and finally, efforts that promote symptom relief, quality of life, security and satisfaction with care during the final period of life. The intervention "Elderly persons in the risk zone" addresses elderly persons that are on the point of developing frailty ("pre-frail") and are beginning to feel that they are being hindered from taking part in everyday activities. The hypothesis is that if an intervention is made when the persons are not so frail, it is possible to prevent/delay deterioration.
1. Can a health-promoting and preventive intervention for "prefrail" elderly persons:
* prevent frailty, activity limitations and morbidity,
* be a supportive factor in the social and physical environment,
* affect life satisfaction
* have an impact on the consumption of care
* be cost-effective?
2. How do the frail elderly persons experience the intervention and its importance to health?
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 459
- 80 years of age or older living in the community.
- The participants should live in their ordinary housing
- Independent on formal support
- Independent on informal support
- Cognitive intact defined as a Mini Mental Test score > 25
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description 2. Senior meetings senior meetings The senior meetings comprised four weekly meetings with about six participants in each group. The main purpose was to focus on two different topics: 1) information about the ageing process and its consequences and 2) provision of tools and strategies for solving problems that can arise in the home environment. A follow-up home visit took place two to three weeks after the group sessions were completed. The group meetings were led either by an occupational therapist, a registered nurse, a physiotherapist or a qualified social worker, all of whom spoke about their particular dimension of aging. 1.Preventive home visit preventive home visit Preventive home visits: This intervention included a single home visit made by either a nurse, a physiotherapist, a qualified social worker or an occupational therapist. Participants received verbal and written information/advice about what the districts could provide. The preventive home visit was guided by a protocol, which included an opportunity for individuals to further elaborate on certain elements. The visit lasted between one and a half to two hours.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Number of Partipants Measured Frail at 1-year Follow up 1 year Frailty defined as a sum of weakness, fatigue, weight loss, low physical activity, poor balance, slow gait speed, visual impairment and impaired cognition
Self Rated Health 1 year Self rated health was measured by the question "In general would yoy say your health is: excellent, very good, good, fair or poor? Number of participants detoriated in self-rated health has been analysed
Dependence in Two or More Activities of Daily Living (ADL) 1 year ADL stair case:
Independence of, or dependence on, another person in ADL was assessed according to a cumulative scale of well-defined personal and instrumental activities, the ADL staircase. Nine out of the ten original activities were used; Cleaning, shopping, transportation, cooking, bathing, dressing, going to the toilet, transfer, and feeding (0-9). Dependence was defined as another person being involved in the activity by giving personal or directive assistance. People living together were assessed as independent if they performed the activity when alone. The number of partipants with dependence in two or more ADL at follow-up have been analyzed
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Gothenburg University
🇸🇪Göteborg, Sweden