P A Lichtenberg1, S E MacNeill, B T Mast. 1. Wayne State University, Institute of Gerontology, Detroit, MI 48202, USA. p.lichtenberg@wayne.edu
Abstract
PURPOSE: This study examined the ability of personal competency variables at the time of hospital discharge to predict primary instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) and secondary outcomes (living arrangements) in a sample of 194 urban, live-alone, older adults who had a new onset disability. DESIGN AND METHODS: Consecutively admitted medical rehabilitation patients, 72% women and 85% African American, participated in the study. Using path analysis, three of the four competency variables collected at the time of hospitalization (cognition, medical burden, activities of daily living) predicted IADLs at 3 and 6 months after hospitalization (e.g., cooking, telephone use, money management). IADLs, in turn, predicted living arrangements at 3 and at 6 months after hospitalization. RESULTS: The findings provided strong support for the importance of assessing a broad range of competency variables when investigating adaptation to disability. IMPLICATIONS: The increased understanding of adaptation in live-alone older adults with a new-onset disability is particularly timely given the increase in live-alone older adults and the dire consequences associated with change in living arrangement (i.e., mortality and morbidity) in this group.
PURPOSE: This study examined the ability of personal competency variables at the time of hospital discharge to predict primary instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) and secondary outcomes (living arrangements) in a sample of 194 urban, live-alone, older adults who had a new onset disability. DESIGN AND METHODS: Consecutively admitted medical rehabilitation patients, 72% women and 85% African American, participated in the study. Using path analysis, three of the four competency variables collected at the time of hospitalization (cognition, medical burden, activities of daily living) predicted IADLs at 3 and 6 months after hospitalization (e.g., cooking, telephone use, money management). IADLs, in turn, predicted living arrangements at 3 and at 6 months after hospitalization. RESULTS: The findings provided strong support for the importance of assessing a broad range of competency variables when investigating adaptation to disability. IMPLICATIONS: The increased understanding of adaptation in live-alone older adults with a new-onset disability is particularly timely given the increase in live-alone older adults and the dire consequences associated with change in living arrangement (i.e., mortality and morbidity) in this group.
Authors: Maggie Killington; Dean Fyfe; Allan Patching; Paul Habib; Annabel McNamara; Rachael Kay; Venugopal Kochiyil; Maria Crotty Journal: Health Expect Date: 2019-01-10 Impact factor: 3.377