Health Care Team Interventions to Reduce Distress Behaviors in Older Adults: A Systematic Review. Ramos K, et al, Clin Gerontol 2024.
Notes sur les tags :
Réaliser des modifications :
Pour modifier ce document, il est nécessaire d'être connecté au site. Pour cela, assurez-vous d'avoir des identifiants valides. Si vous n'en avez pas,
contactez-nous. Pour vous connecter, cliquez sur l'icône
dans la barre de navigation.
Résumé et points clés
Objectives: This review examines health care team-focused interventions on managing persistent or recurrent distress behaviors among older adults in long-term residential or inpatient health care settings.
Methods: We searched interventions addressing health care worker (HCW) knowledge and skills related to distress behavior management using Ovid MEDLINE, Elsevier Embase, and Ovid PsycINFO from December 2002 through December 2022.
Results: We screened 6,582 articles; 29 randomized trials met inclusion criteria. Three studies on patient-facing HCW interactions (e.g. medication management, diagnosing distress) showed mixed results on agitation; one study found no effect on quality of life. Six HCW-focused studies suggested short-term reduction in distress behaviors. Quality-of-life improvement or decreased antipsychotic use was not evidenced. Among 17 interventions combining HCW-focused and patient-facing activities, 0 showed significant distress reduction, 8 showed significant antipsychotic reduction (OR = 0.79, 95%CI [0.69, 0.91]) and 9 showed quality of life improvements (SMD = 0.71, 95%CI [0.39, 1.04]). One study evaluating HCW, patient-, and environmental-focused intervention activities showed short-term improvement in agitation. CONCLUSIONS AND
Clinical implications: Novel health care models combining HCW training and patient management improve patient quality of life, reduce antipsychotic use, and may reduce distress behaviors. Evaluation of intervention's effects on staff burnout and utilization is needed.
Références de l'article
- Health Care Team Interventions to Reduce Distress Behaviors in Older Adults: A Systematic Review.
- Health Care Team Interventions to Reduce Distress Behaviors in Older Adults: A Systematic Review.
- Ramos K, Shepherd-Banigan M, McDermott C, McConnell ES, Raman SR, Chen D, Der T, Tabriz AA, Boggan JC, Boucher NA, Carlson SM, Joseph L, Sims CA, Ma JE, Gordon AM, Dennis P, Snyder J, Jacobs M, Cantrell S, Gierisch JM, Goldstein KM
- Clinical gerontologist
- 2024
- Clin Gerontol. 2024 Oct-Dec;47(5):730-745. doi: 10.1080/07317115.2024.2372424. Epub 2024 Jul 2.
- Aged, Humans, Health Personnel/education, *Patient Care Team, *Psychological Distress, *Quality of Life/psychology, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
- Vieillissement, Longévité, Soins, Relationnels, Qualité_de_vie, IDE, Revue_systématique
- Liens
- Traduction automatique en Français sur Google Translate
- DOI: 10.1080/07317115.2024.2372424
- PMID: 38954524
- Articles similaires
- Cité par
- Références
- Texte complet gratuit
- Twitter
- Twitter cet article (lien vers l'article)
- Twitter cet article (lien vers cette page)
Éditer la discussion
Références