| Literature DB >> 35762169 |
Sook Meng Lee1,2, Erika Martino3, Marie Bismark4, Rebecca Bentley3.
Abstract
Older people living in squalor present healthcare providers with a set of complex issues because squalor occurs alongside a variety of medical and psychiatric conditions, and older people living in squalor frequently decline intervention. To synthesise empirical evidence on squalor to inform ethical decision-making in the management of squalor using the bioethical framework of principlism. A systematic literature search was conducted using Medline, Embase, PsycINFO and CINAHL databases for empirical research on squalor in older people. Given the limited evidence base to date, an interpretive approach to synthesis was used. Sixty-seven articles that met the inclusion criteria were included in the review. Our synthesis of the research evidence indicates that: (i) older people living in squalor have a high prevalence of frontal executive dysfunction, medical comorbidities and premature deaths; (ii) interventions are complex and require interagency involvement, with further evaluations needed to determine the effectiveness and potential harm of interventions; and (iii) older people living in squalor utilise more medical and social resources, and may negatively impact others around them. These results suggest that autonomous decision-making capacity should be determined rather than assumed. The harm associated with squalid living for the older person, and for others around them, means a non-interventional approach is likely to contravene the principles of non-maleficence, beneficence and justice. Adequate assessment of decision-making capacity is of particular importance. To be ethical, any intervention undertaken must balance benefits, harms, resource utilisation and impact on others.Entities:
Keywords: Diogenes syndrome; ethics; hoarding; principlism; self-neglect; squalor
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35762169 PMCID: PMC9544969 DOI: 10.1111/imj.15862
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intern Med J ISSN: 1444-0903 Impact factor: 2.611
Electronic search strategy
| Search terms | Medline (Ovid) | EMBASE (Ovid) | PsycINFO (Ovid) | CINAHL |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Map term to subject heading | Hoarding Disorder, Hoarding | exp hoarding disorder, hoarding, obsessive hoarding, Diogenes syndrome | exp Hoarding Behaviour, Animal Hoarding Behaviour, exp. Hoarding Disorder | exp ‘Obsessive Hoarding’, ‘Diogenes Syndrome’ |
| exp Therapeutics Case Management, exp Patient Care Management | exp therapy, case management, exp patient care, intervention study | exp Treatment, exp Case Management | ‘Behaviour Therapy+’, ‘Case Management’ | |
| Keyword search in abstract and title | hoard*, ‘Diogenes Syndrome*’, squalor*, clutter*, elder*, senile*, old*, ‘older people’, ‘older adult*’, ‘older person*’, self‐neglect*, ‘self‐neglect’ | hoard*, ‘Diogenes Syndrome*’, squalor*, clutter*, elder*, senile*, old*, ‘older people’, ‘older adult*’, ‘older person*’, self‐neglect*, ‘self‐neglect’ | hoard*, ‘Diogenes Syndrome*’, squalor*, clutter*, elder*, senile*, old*, ‘older people’, ‘older adult*’, ‘older person*’, self‐neglect*, ‘self‐neglect’ | hoard*, ‘Diogenes Syndrome*’, squalor*, clutter*, elder*, senile*, old*, ‘older people’, ‘older adult*’, ‘older person*’, self‐neglect*, ‘self‐neglect’ |
| therap*, manag*, interven*, declutter*, de‐clutter* | therap*, manag*, interven*, declutter*, de‐clutter* | therap*, manag*, interven*, declutter*, de‐clutter* | therap*, manag*, interven*, declutter*, de‐clutter* |
Key search terms were mapped to subject headings in each database and searched as a keyword in Medline (Ovid), EMBASE (Ovid), psycINFO (Ovid) and CINAHL. The term ‘exp’ (Medline, EMBASE and PsycINFO) and the sign ‘+’ (CINAHL) indicate that the term was exploded in the MeSH (Medical subject heading) vocabulary to capture narrower terms associated with the broader concept. The asterisk * is a wildcard symbol used to broaden the search by finding words that start with the same letters. Quotation marks indicates phrase searching where words must appear as an exact phrase. All searches were limited to English language, humans and abstract.
Figure 1Flow diagram of search strategy and identification of articles included in the review.