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Exploring the prevalence and variance of cognitive impairment, pain, neuropsychiatric symptoms and ADL dependency among persons living in nursing homes; a cross-sectional study.

Authors :
Björk, Sabine
Juthberg, Christina
Lindkvist, Marie
Wimo, Anders
Sandman, Per-Olof
Winblad, Bengt
Edvardsson, David
Source :
BMC Geriatrics; 8/22/2016, Vol. 17, p1-8, 8p, 3 Charts
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Earlier studies in nursing homes show a high prevalence of cognitive impairment, dependency in activities of daily living (ADL), pain, and neuropsychiatric symptoms among residents. The aim of this study was to explore the prevalence of the above among residents in a nationally representative sample of Swedish nursing homes, and to investigate whether pain and neuropsychiatric symptoms differ in relation to gender, cognitive function, ADL-capacity, type of nursing-home unit and length of stay.<bold>Methods: </bold>Cross-sectional data from 188 randomly selected nursing homes were collected. A total of 4831 residents were assessed for cognitive and ADL function, pain and neuropsychiatric symptoms. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics and the chi-square test.<bold>Results: </bold>The results show the following: the prevalence of cognitive impairment was 67 %, 56 % of residents were ADL-dependent, 48 % exhibited pain and 92 % exhibited neuropsychiatric symptoms. The prevalence of pain did not differ significantly between male and female residents, but pain was more prevalent among cognitively impaired and ADL-dependent residents. Pain prevalence was not significantly different between residents in special care units for people with dementia (SCU) and general units, or between shorter-and longer-stay residents. Furthermore, the prevalence of neuropsychiatric symptoms did not differ significantly between male and female residents, between ADL capacities or in relation to length of stay. However, residents with cognitive impairment and residents in SCUs had a significantly higher prevalence of neuropsychiatric symptoms than residents without cognitive impairment and residents in general units.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>The prevalence rates ascertained in this study could contribute to a greater understanding of the needs of nursing-home residents, and may provide nursing home staff and managers with trustworthy assessment scales and benchmark values for further quality assessment purposes, clinical development work and initiating future nursing assessments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712318
Volume :
17
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Geriatrics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
117674647
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-016-0328-9