| Literature DB >> 23272951 |
Vari M Drennan1, Nan Greenwood, Laura Cole, Mandy Fader, Robert Grant, Greta Rait, Steve Iliffe.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dementia is a distressing and disabling illness with worldwide estimates of increased numbers of people with the condition. Two thirds of people with dementia live at home and policies in many countries seek to support more people for longer in this setting. Incontinence both contributes to carer burden and is also a significant factor in the decision to move into care homes. A review was conducted for evidence of effectiveness for conservative interventions, which are non-pharmacological and non-surgical interventions, for the prevention or management of incontinence in community dwelling people with dementia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23272951 PMCID: PMC3562513 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2318-12-77
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Search terms
| Delirium, Dementia, Amnestic, Cognitive Disorders/ or exp Dementia/. Dementia. Aged. Elderly | |
| Community dwelling. Community. Community living. Homebound patients. | |
| Urinary Incontinence. Fecal Incontinence. | |
| Self care, Activities of daily living or adl. Toilet. Toilet facilities. Toilet training. Behavior therapy. Incontinence pads, diapers. | |
| Caregivers, Caregiver burden, Spouses, Family. | |
| Ambulatory care, Ambulatory care nursing, Home health care, Home health agencies, Home nursing, Community health services, Home care services, Social support, Occupational therapy |
Figure 1PRISMA [[25]] Flow diagram of search results.
Characteristics of the included studies
| Gitlin and Corcoran [ | To test the effectiveness of a home based intervention to expand caregiver problem solving and use of environmental solutions for problems with bathing and incontinence for elderly people with dementia | Randomised two group experimental pilot study Time period 3 months | Recruited spouse carers from a network of social service agencies ; Inclusion criteria: 1) reside with a spouse diagnosed with moderate Alzheimer’s Disease 2) provide assistance with 2 or more activities of daily living 3) serve as a primary source of care and 4) not receive any home care services. 37 spouse carers recruited and 17 randomly assigned (unspecified) to the treatment group. | Number of effective solutions offered by OT and used by spouse carer and evaluated as effective by OT for intervention group only. | |
| Jirovec & Templin [ | To determine if functional incontinence (FUI) could be reduced in memory impaired incontinent elders who had a individualised toileting programme (IST) | 2 X 2 mixed design analysis by variance (group by time). Time period 6 months. | Recruited by advertisement for carers of ‘Memory impaired’ elders. Eligibility criteria not specified. 118 dyads recruited. 77 randomly assigned (by random number tables) to intervention (38 to bi-monthly follow up and 38 to 6 month follow up) and 41 to control. | Percentage of time the patient was incontinent derived by dividing incontinence episodes by the total number of voiding episodes, both continent and incontinent. Baseline compared with follow up at 6 months All voiding episodes recorded by carer in continence diary kept for up to one week baseline and 6 months. Majority of carers only able to keep diary 3–4 days. During the same week, carers asked how often they were able to implement the IST protocol. | |
| Enberg et al. [ | To examine the short-term effectiveness of prompted voiding (PV) in cognitively impaired homebound older adults. | Exploratory study Prospective, controlled cross-over design where the usual care controls crossed over to the intervention following an 8 week observation period. Time period 10 weeks. | Participants recruited via Home Health Nursing Services Inclusion: > 60yrs, housebound, speak English, be incontinent at least 2x per week for at least 3 months and have a full time carer, MMSE [ | Percentage reduction in the average daily frequency of incontinent episodes Percentages of time subjects were wet by proportion of incontinence voids. Comparison of continence for the 2 weeks following the last control or treatment visit to the 2 week baseline period as recorded by the carers in bladder diaries. In addition for the carers a study designed questionnaire to assess perceptions of the intervention at the end. |
Assessment of bias
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| Selection bias. | “randomly assigned to either attention control group who received home-making services or a treatment group” [26 p14] No data presented on the control group characteristics | Method of allocation not specified. No comment |
| Performance bias (blinding of participants and personnel) | Participants aware of receiving OT or home making service. OT aware they were providing the intervention. | Risk of bias |
| Detection bias (blinding of outcome assessment). | OT providing the intervention also provided the assessment of reported outcomes (care giver acceptance of solutions and elimination of ineffective care giver approaches). | Risk of bias |
| Attrition bias (incomplete outcome data) | No attrition from the study reported Data only provided for the intervention group on | Risk of bias |
| Reporting bias. | Reporting only on the intervention group. | Risk of bias |
| | ||
| Selection bias. | “Using a table of random numbers, volunteers were randomly assigned to either intervention or control group | Low risk |
| Performance bias (blinding of participants and personnel) | Participants aware of receiving intervention or in control group. Personnel aware of those in the intervention or control group | Risk of bias |
| Detection bias (blinding of outcome assessment). | “The same person collected data from the intervention participants and the control group data collectors were not involved in the intervention”p5 | Risk of bias |
| Attrition bias (incomplete outcome data). | Attrition rate, 37%, and reasons reported. “The loss of participants between the groups was not significantly different” [27 p5]. Three of four study measures reported. The implementation of IST by carers was not reported. | Low risk Risk of bias |
| Reporting bias. | The intervention arm was assigned into two groups, those that received bi-monthly visits and those that received a visit at 6 months. The data from these two arms were combined as the 6-month outcomes for percentage of time incontinent were “not significantly different” [27 p2] but not presented. | Risk of bias |
| Other points | The paper reports that this is a significant decrease in the experimental group using the non-parametric sign test (Z= −1.83, p<.05) [27 p 5]. As these figures appeared inconsistent we re-ran the sign test using the reported data which gave Z=−1.81, p=0.07 which is borderline but not significant. We re-ran the data on another version of the sign test, the exact binomial which gave a value of p=0.09 i.e. still not statistically significant between the groups. | |
| | ||
| Selection bias. | “Randomly assigned with use of a computerised minimisation algorithm” ( 28 p255) “Despite randomisation, the control group tended to have more severe incontinence than the treatment group” [28p259] | Low risk of bias |
| Performance bias (blinding of participants and personnel) | Participants aware of receiving intervention or in control group. Personnel aware of those in the intervention or control group | Risk of bias |
| Detection bias (blinding of outcome assessment). | “The 2 study NPs collected a comprehensive continence and medical history for the subject and caregiver” [28 p254] and provided the intervention and attention control.. “ | Risk of bias |
| Attrition bias (incomplete outcome data). | Low risk of bias | |
| Reporting bias. | All outcomes and measures reported | Low risk |