Facilitating Aging in Place: Safe, Sound, and Secure, An Issue of Nursing Clinics -  Lazelle E. Benefield

Facilitating Aging in Place: Safe, Sound, and Secure, An Issue of Nursing Clinics (eBook)

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2014 | 1. Auflage
169 Seiten
Elsevier Health Sciences (Verlag)
978-0-323-29943-5 (ISBN)
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Facilitating Aging in Place: Safe, Sound, and Secure, An Issue of Nursing Clinics,
The articles appearing in this geriatrics-focused issue are consistent with the collaborative and translational concepts held by a life course perspective. Each supports interprofessional collaboration and some are either authored or coauthored by interdisciplinary colleagues. Three goals are reflected in these articles: keeping community-dwelling older adults safe, sensible, and secure with solutions that will enable them to stay healthy, wise, and aware. Topics include maintaining physical functions, benefits and consequences of weight-bearing exercise on foot health; cancer prevention; managing nocturia's effect on sleep quality and safety; protection from financial exploitation; and providing safe and affordable living environments. Several articles address physical or cognitive challenges that include monitoring medication adherence, threat of anxiety and stigma in dementia, and approaches to managing self-care in the home for persons with dementia. These evidence-based articles address emerging and best practices to support targeted interventions for persons in community-dwelling home settings. They provide a frame-work of person-centered approaches that foster good health in older age, a central tenet of aging in place and the global response to population aging.

Front Cover 1
Facilitating Aging in 
2 
copyright 
3 
Contributors 4
Contents 8
Nursing Clinics Of 

11 
Foreword 
12 
References 13
Preface 
14 
Introduction 14
References 15
Aging in Place 18
Key points 18
Introduction 18
Aging in Place Defined 18
Realities of aging environments 19
Local crises in a global context 20
Life course perspective to address person-centered realities 21
Principles and Key Actions 21
Implementing a Life Course Model 22
Inclusion of the consumer/older person decision making 22
Technology as a core support structure 23
Interdisciplinary involvement 23
Placement of care coordination 24
Summary 24
Acknowledgments 24
References 24
Further readings 26
Improving Unsafe Environments to Support Aging Independence with Limited Resources 28
Key points 28
Unsafe exterior environments pose barriers to aging with independence 29
Neighborhood 29
House Exterior 29
Unsafe home interiors can pose even greater threats to aging with independence 29
Fall Risk and the Home Environment 30
Activities of Daily Living/Instrumental Activities of Daily Living and Environmental Factors 30
An innovative model for promoting aging with independence: the CAPABLE intervention 31
Three innovations of the CAPABLE model in action: a case example 33
The Client 33
The Client’s Functional Goals 33
Issues Affecting Goal Achievement and Resulting Interventions 33
Medication side effects 33
Pain and low mood 34
Lower extremity weakness 34
Lack of railings on stairways 34
Value Added by the CAPABLE Approach 34
Innovation 1: client-directed care 34
Innovation 2: addressing medical/functional issues through an RN/OT team 34
Innovation 3: treating housing as health 38
Lessons learned while implementing the CAPABLE model 38
Summary 38
References 39
Maintenance of Physical Function in Frail Older Adults 42
Key points 42
Background 43
Management 44
Evaluation/diagnosis 44
Recommendations for PA 45
Patient considerations to initiating and maintaining a routine of PA 45
Barriers 45
Facilitators 46
Summary of Recommendations 47
Summary 48
References 48
Maximizing ADL Performance to Facilitate Aging in Place for People with Dementia 52
Key points 52
Introduction 52
Evaluation of ADL 54
ADL Screening 54
ADL Assessment 55
Intervention 56
Therapeutic Relationship 57
Repetitive, Errorless Training 57
Cognitive Strategies 59
Assistive Technology 59
Caregiver Training 59
Future directions 61
Summary 61
References 61
The Older Adult with Diabetes 66
Key points 66
Introduction 66
How does PN develop? 67
How does neuropathy lead to diabetic foot ulcers? 67
How does neuropathy lead to a risk for falls? 70
What do I need to know about examining the foot and assessing the risk for falls? 71
What should I tell the client about prevention of foot ulcers and falling? 72
Summary 73
References 73
Medication Adherence in Older Adults 78
Key points 78
Nonadherence as a prevalent and costly problem 79
Definitions 79
Intentional versus unintentional nonadherence 79
What interventions have proved effective? 80
What about older adults specifically? 80
Are these studies meaningful? 81
How to measure adherence 81
Seeing the big picture—the World Health Organization framework 82
New directions: innovations in technology 83
Will older adults use the newer technology? 84
New directions: policy 88
New directions: creative solutions, unique populations 89
Implications for practice 90
References 91
Keeping Older Adults Safe, Protected, and Healthy by Preventing Financial Exploitation 96
Key points 96
Introduction 96
FE as an older adult health problem 98
FE Victims Are Health Care Clients in Need of Specific Types of Care 98
Health Caregivers and Employees as FE Offenders 99
Health Problems Arise as a Result of FE 100
FE Victimization Often Occurs Within the Health Care Context or Setting 100
FE Risks Are Tied to Older Adult Health 100
FE of minorities: African American elders 100
Underdetecting and underreporting FE 101
FE prevention intervention strategies 102
Summary 104
References 105
Anxiety and Stigma in Dementia 108
Key points 109
Dementia-related anxiety 109
Definition 109
Prevalence 109
Symptoms and Related Outcomes 110
Association with Other Behaviors 110
Causes 110
Insight and Anxiety 111
Relationship Between Stigma and Anxiety in Persons with Early-Stage Dementia 111
Research Findings on Anxiety and Stigma in Dementia 112
Case study—part 1 113
Clinical Implications for Health Care Professionals 113
Assessment 113
Stigma Impact Scale 114
Anxiety Level 114
Treatment 115
Educating Health Care Professionals 116
Caregiver Education and Support 116
Anxiety Interventions for PwD 116
Pharmacologic interventions 116
Psychosocial interventions 117
Cognitive behavioral therapy 117
Interventions for stigma 118
Public education about dementia 118
Educating Health Care Professionals/Providers 119
Case study: part 2 120
Interventions to Promote Aging in Place in Persons with Dementia Experiencing Anxiety 121
Special considerations for aging in place: transitional care and “live alones” 121
Summary 122
References 122
Nocturia in Older Adults 128
Key points 128
Introduction 128
Epidemiology of nocturia 129
Pathophysiology of nocturia 129
Diminished or Nocturnal Reduction in Bladder Capacity 129
Twenty-Four-Hour Polyuria 131
Nocturnal Polyuria 131
Altered Diurnal Variation in Renal Function 132
Alterations in Sodium and Water Reabsorption 133
Sleep disorders and nocturia 134
Less studied correlate of nocturia: disrupted sleep and circadian rhythm disorders 134
Clinical assessment 136
Treatment options 138
Which clinical end points are important? 139
Summary 140
References 140
Cancer Screening in the Older Adult 146
Key points 146
Population predictions 147
Decision making about cancer screening 147
Practice guidelines 147
Life expectancy and comorbidity 148
Biology of cancer related to life expectancy 148
Risks and benefits of cancer screening 151
Individual wishes and beliefs 153
To screen or not to screen 153
References 154
Index 158

Improving Unsafe Environments to Support Aging Independence with Limited Resources


Sarah L. Szanton, PhD, ANPsszanto1@jhu.edu, Jill Roth, BSN, Manka Nkimbeng, MPH, BSN, Jessica Savage, BSN and Rachel Klimmek, PhD, RN,     Department of Community and Public Health, School of Nursing, Johns Hopkins University, 525 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA

∗Corresponding author.

Aging with independence benefits individuals, family, and society. To achieve independence, older adults must be able to function in their homes. This function is determined both by their abilities and by the environment in which they maneuver. This article describes a promising program that intervenes with both older adults and their home environments to improve function. This program, called CAPABLE (Community Aging in Place, Advancing Better Living for Elders), is funded through the Affordable Care Act and can be scaled up nationally if determined to be a success in improving health and decreasing health care costs.

Keywords

Function

Older adults

Disability

Interprofessional

Key points


• Aging with independence benefits individuals, family, and society but can be hard to achieve.

• Function is determined by both the person and the environment in which they maneuver.

• This article describes a promising program that intervenes with both older adults and their home environments to improve function.

• This program, called CAPABLE (Community Aging in Place, Advancing Better Living for Elders), is funded through the Affordable Care Act and can be scaled up nationally if determined to be a success.

Aging with independence is important to older adults for multiple reasons: it affords better quality of life for older individuals and their families,1 and is a foundational American value that, when achieved, saves resources for society to use in other ways. The number of older adults in the United States is projected to continue growing,2 making it increasingly urgent to identify ways to support aging with independence. For many older adults, the challenges are socioeconomic.3 However, for almost everyone, at every income level, aging brings functional challenges that can compromise independence. These functional challenges result from interactions between an individual’s health and the surrounding environment. Low-income older adults face even greater challenges to independence because they have more comorbidities3; experience more functional limitations as a result4,5; and, by definition, have fewer resources to modify their home environments. This combination places them at even greater risk for reduced activity levels, social isolation, falls, and other adverse events. This article explains how unsafe environments affect older adults with functional limitations, and describes an interprofessional model of care, called CAPABLE (Community Aging in Place, Advancing Better Living for Elders), which addresses both individual and environmental aspects of aging with independence. This article also provides tools and lessons for use while implementing this innovative model of care within a community of urban-dwelling, low-income older adults with multiple functional limitations.

Unsafe exterior environments pose barriers to aging with independence


Every level of the environment supports or inhibits function and health.6 From the neighborhood surrounding an older adult’s home, to the steps leading up to their front doors, to the interior of the house and each room; all of these environments affect an older adult’s ability to function well enough to age in place.

Neighborhood


The neighborhood of residence can affect health and safety in later life, particularly in urban settings where factors such as broken or littered sidewalks and busy streets, a lack of safe spaces to exercise, or the geography of gun violence and other threats710 pose risks that keep some older adults indoors. Some neighborhoods also contain food deserts, meaning places lacking markets with ready supplies of produce and other options essential to a healthy diet. Unsafe neighborhoods not only prevent older adults from engaging in the types of activities associated with sustaining an independent living situation (eg, shopping, medical appointments, outdoor exercise), they can also interfere with older adults’ ability to visit the places many associate with a high quality of life (eg, green spaces, houses of worship, senior centers, the homes of family and friends). Other barriers that may be more common to suburban and rural environments, such as the absence of sidewalks and other walkways, adequate lighting, and public transportation; geographic features such as steep inclines; or natural features such as mud and brush, can render older adults homebound.

House Exterior


On opening their front doors, many older adults are stuck at the top of their own front steps because of broken stairs, a lack of adequate railings, or stairs that are too steep or slippery for increasingly weak leg muscles to navigate. Each time they descend or ascend these steps, these individuals face the risk of falling, which can lead to serious injury or even death. Unsafe stairs pose a threat when older adults must go out (for example, to attend a medical appointment) and also bar exiting the home for optional activities such as volunteer work, socializing with friends and family, or participating in religious services. These disparities in housing conditions can lead to health disparities because community-dwelling older adults derive benefits from social engagement outside their homes, such as caregiving for friends or neighbors,11,12 working part time,13 or attending church and family activities.14 Onset of functional decline, which can put older adults at risk when entering or exiting their homes if proper safety measures are not in place, has been linked to cessation of these types of potentially beneficial activities.15

Unsafe home interiors can pose even greater threats to aging with independence


Although unsafe exterior environments, such as communities with neighborhood violence and broken sidewalks, pose some of the most visibly obvious threats to the health and well-being of older persons, often the most dangerous place for these adults is inside their own homes. Interactions between underlying health conditions and unsafe home interiors result in functional limitations that not only place older adults at risk for injury but also prevent them from doing the things they associate with living well. Given the severe challenges of addressing the problems that may exist outside an older adult’s home, the rest of this article focuses on strategies for supporting aging with independence by addressing the safety issues that often exist inside older adults’ homes and that contribute to functional limitations in later life.

Fall Risk and the Home Environment


One in 3 adults fall every year with subsequent morbidity including nursing home admission and mortality.16,17 Not only are the falls dangerous but so is remaining on the ground if unable to arise. Individual (intrinsic) factors contributing to falls include decreased mobility, decreased balance, decreased vision, and medications that act on the central nervous system. External (extrinsic) factors are equally important and include clutter, uneven or hole-ridden floors, inadequate railing or banisters, steep stairs, oxygen tubing, wires in walking spaces, and slick surfaces such as bathroom floors. In addition, there are extrinsic factors that are made more dangerous by interactions with intrinsic factors; for example, slippery bathtubs with high sides in the home of someone with poor balance, or toilets without grab bars in the home of someone with weak legs (Fig. 1).


Fig. 1 A client practices using grab bars to exit the bathtub.

Activities of Daily Living/Instrumental Activities of Daily Living and Environmental Factors


Activities of daily living (ADLs), including bathing, grooming, getting on and off of the toilet, getting in and out of the bed, and dressing are, by definition, essential to daily life. Community-dwelling older adults who cannot safely do these activities on their own must rely on informal or paid caregivers in order to age in place. Because of a tendency to focus on illness management rather than function, medical and nursing professionals may fail to adequately assess and address older adults’ functional challenges, even though function is the key to staying independent. An estimated $350 billion each year are spent on nursing home care for people unable to function independently. An additional $450 billion in unpaid care are provided by informal or family caregivers assisting older adults in performing everyday self-care tasks.18 Without intervention, these costs will continue to increase as the...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 9.8.2014
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Medizin / Pharmazie Medizinische Fachgebiete Geriatrie
Medizin / Pharmazie Pflege Altenpflege
ISBN-10 0-323-29943-1 / 0323299431
ISBN-13 978-0-323-29943-5 / 9780323299435
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