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Admission Factors Influencing Activities of Daily Living in Nursing Home Residents Admitted from Acute Care Hospitals

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KMID : 0895920080100010068
ÀÌÁö¾Æ ( Lee Ji-A ) - °æÈñ´ëÇб³ °£È£°úÇдëÇÐ

 ( Marilyn J. Rantz ) - USA University of Missouri-Columbia College of Nursing

Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to describe the level of activities of daily living (ADL) at 3 months in nursing home residents admitted immediately from hospital and to identify nursing home admission factors influencing level of ADL.

Method: Based on previous findings, seven potential predictors were identified: ADL, pressure ulcers, urinary incontinence, malnutrition, pain, history of falls, and cognitive impairment. The study employed a retrospective correlational design. Data were extracted from the Minimum Data Set (MDS) of 38,591 older adults admitted to nursing homes from acute care hospitals and who stayed in the nursing home for at least 3 months (some of them stayed until 3 months). All analyses were carried out with the SAS program using the method of generalized estimating equations.

Results: Level of ADL at admission measured by the MDS-ADL was significantly lower than it was at 3 months. Poor ADL, urinary incontinence and pressure ulcers were the most important admission factors predicting poor ADL at 3 months.

Conclusion: The findings provide evidence of the need for a systematic assessment tool for nursing homes in K
orea. Such a tool would allow health care providers in nursing homes to predict patterns of ADL in older adults based on the admission assessment.
KeyWords
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Nursing home, Activities of daily living, Health assessment
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