Precipitating and Predisposing Events and Symptoms For Admission to Assisted Living or Nursing Home Care

Authors

  • James KH Rockwood DGI Clinical
  • Matthew Richard DGI Clinical
  • Kathryn Garden DGI Clinical, 1344 Summer Street, Suite 208, Halifax, NS, Canada, B3H 0A8
  • Kathryn Hominick Department of Social Work & Centre for Health care of the Elderly
  • Arnold Mitnitski Dalhousie University, DGI Clinical
  • Kenneth Rockwood Dalhousie University, DGI Clinical

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5770/cgj.17.93

Keywords:

aging, dementia, long-term care, hospitalization, frailty

Abstract

Background

In Canada, the rise of private-pay assisted living facilities is changing the long-term care landscape. Even so, few clinical implications of having these facilities in the spectrum of care have been studied. Our objective was to compare events and symptoms that might predispose and precipitate a move of older adults to assisted living or to a nursing home.

Methods

Cross-sectional, descriptive Nova Scotia survey of residents and family members on admission. Health-care use and dementia diagnosis were recorded from the admission record. Dementia was staged using the Global Deterioration Scale and the Dependence Scale. The SymptomGuide, a standardized dementia symptom inventory, was used to assay which symptoms were most influential in the decision to seek long term care. Caregiver stress was elicited by a self-report questionnaire.

Results

Of 353 people admitted during the enrolment period, 174 (49%) took part in the survey. Most (97; 55.7%) were involved in a move from the community to a nursing home, 54 (31.0%) from the community to assisted living, and 23 (13.2%) from assisted living to a nursing home. In each setting, dementia was the commonest predisposing factor (seen in >90%) with a precipitating event seen in 120 (69%) people. The precipitating events included a medical illness (n = 97; 55%) or caregiver illness, death or move (33; 19%). Dependence was associated with place of care, with more severely impaired people more commonly represented in people who moved to nursing homes.

Conclusions

People move from the community chiefly due to dementia, and often with a precipitant. Compared with a move to assisted living, moving to nursing homes generally indicates greater dependence, and typically worse dementia severity. Even so, assisted-living facilities are not just for the “worried well”, but are used by people with dementia, caregiver stress, and recent hospitalization.

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Published

2013-12-20

How to Cite

1.
Rockwood JK, Richard M, Garden K, Hominick K, Mitnitski A, Rockwood K. Precipitating and Predisposing Events and Symptoms For Admission to Assisted Living or Nursing Home Care. Can Geriatr J [Internet]. 2013 Dec. 20 [cited 2024 Apr. 19];17(1):16-21. Available from: https://cgjonline.ca/index.php/cgj/article/view/93

Issue

Section

Original Research