| Literature DB >> 30078096 |
Joanne K Taylor1,2, Iain E Buchan3,4, Sabine N van der Veer3.
Abstract
Life-space mobility (LSM) is a holistic measure of resilience to physical decline and social isolation in later life. To promote its use as an outcome in geriatric studies and in clinical practice, this review paper explains the concept of LSM; outlines available questionnaires for LSM assessment, provides an overview of associations between LSM and other outcomes, and discusses emerging methods to measure LSM using wearable sensors. Based on performed activity around a central geographical anchor, LSM aims to quantify the observed contraction of daily activities associated with ageing. Several questionnaires are available to assess LSM in different contexts: the University of Alabama Life-Space Assessment and the Life-Space Questionnaire (community settings), the Nursing Home Life-Space Diameter (nursing home settings) and Life Space at Home (for house-bound populations). Some studies using GPS trackers to calculate life-space parameters reported promising results. Although these techniques reduce data collection burden, battery life and older people's willingness to wear a tracker require further improvement before they can be used more widely. Regardless of the assessment method used, LSM was associated with measures of functional and cognitive abilities, nursing home admission and mortality. The current availability of instruments, the ongoing development of less burdensome data collection techniques, and evidence of construct validity support a case for promoting integration of LSM assessments into geriatric research studies and clinical practice. Ultimately, this will provide a more holistic view on older people's health and wellbeing.Entities:
Keywords: Activities of daily living; Aged; Life space; Mobility; Social isolation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30078096 PMCID: PMC6439151 DOI: 10.1007/s40520-018-0999-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Clin Exp Res ISSN: 1594-0667 Impact factor: 3.636
Available questionnaires to assess LSM and their characteristics
| Questionnaire | Population | Administration | Format | Aspects of LSM measured | Timeframe | Score | Examples of studies that used the questionnaires |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Alabama Life-Space Assessment (UAB-LSA) [ | Community dwelling older people | Interviewer, self-report | 9 questions | Area: five zones | 4 weeks | Composite score based on three domains, 0–120 | MrOS [ |
| Life-space Questionnaire (LSQ) [ | Community dwelling older people | Interviewer, self-reporta | 9 questions | Area: nine zones | 3 daysc | Simple tally score, 0–9 | ACTIVE [ |
| Nursing Home Life-Space Diameter (NHLSD) [ | Nursing home residents | Interviewer | 4 questions | Area: four zones | 2 weeks | Total score = multiplication of three domains, 0–100 | Tinetti and Ginter 1990 [ |
| Life-Space at Home (LSH) [ | Housebound older people | Interviewer | A set of instructions for score calculation | Area: four zones | 1 week | Total score = multiplication of three domains, unlimited score | Hashidate et al. [ |
MrOS The Osteoporotic Fractures in Men Study, SAOS The South Australian Omnibus Survey, E-SAS The Elderly Status Assessment Set, UAB University of Alabama at Birmingham Study of Ageing, LISPE Life-Space Mobility in Old Age Study, IMIAS International Mobility in Aging Study, ACTIVE Advanced Cognitive Training for Independent and Vital Elderly, WHAS-1 The Women’s Health and Aging Study I, MAP Rush Memory and Aging Project, MARS The Minority Aging Research Study, Nordic RCT Nordic multi-centre study on physical and daily activities for residents in nursing home settings, REDNICNH Recourse Use and Disease Course in dementia—Nursing Home study
aSelf-report used with modified versions only
bSome modified versions have adapted to include this
cSome modified versions have expanded this
dModified version used
Advantage and disadvantages of available life-space mobility (LSM) assessment methods
| Assessment method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Questionnaires | ||
| University of Alabama Life-Space Assessment (UAB-LSA) [ | Well-established and commonly used method | High-data collection burden (minimum 20 items) |
| Life-space Questionnaire (LSQ) [ | Well-established and commonly used method | Only takes into account one dimension of LSM (i.e. area) |
| Nursing Home Life-Space Diameter (NHLSD) [ | Moderate evidence base for validity | Only validated in nursing home populations |
| Life Space at Home (LSH) [ | Moderate evidence base for validity | Not commonly used |
| Sensor methods | ||
| GPS trackers [ | Low-data collection burden | Limited evidence base for validity |
| Residence-based sensor networks [ | Very low data collection burden | No evidence base for validity |
GPS global positioning system, LSM life-space mobility
aMobility construct as described by Webber et al. [4] assumes degree of individual autonomy—may not be applicable for most dependent residents