Testing the effect of function-focused care in assisted living.

Journal: Journal Of The American Geriatrics Society
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To develop and test the Function-Focused Care in Assisted Living (FFC-AL) intervention so as to alter the decline that older adults in AL experience.

Methods: Cluster-randomized controlled trial using repeated measures to test the effect of FFC-AL. Methods: Four AL facilities with at least 100 beds. Methods: One hundred seventy-one residents and 96 direct care workers (DCWs) were recruited. Ninety-five of the DCWs were female (99%), and 59 were black (62%), with a mean age of 41.7 ± 13.8. The residents were mostly female (80%), white (93%), and widowed (80%), with a mean age of 87.7 ± 5.7. Methods: FFC-AL included four components implemented by a research-supported function focused-care nurse (FFCN) and a site-identified champion over a 12-month period. Control sites were exposed to FFC education only. Methods: Outcomes for residents included psychosocial domains (mood, resilience, self-efficacy, and outcome expectations for function and physical activity), function, gait and balance, and actigraphy. Outcomes for DCWs included knowledge, performance, and beliefs associated with FFC.

Results: DCWs in treatment sites provided more FFC by 12 months than those in control sites. Residents in treatment sites demonstrated less decline in function, a greater percentage returned to ambulatory status, and there were positive trends demonstrating more time in moderate-level physical activity at 4 months and more overall counts of activity at 12 months than for residents in control sites.

Conclusions: Using a function-focused approach in AL may help prevent some of the functional decline commonly noted in these settings.

Authors
Barbara Resnick, Elizabeth Galik, Ann Gruber Baldini, Sheryl Zimmerman