Grando Victoria T, Rantz Marilyn J, Petroski Gregory F, Maas Meridean, Popejoy Lori, Conn Vicki, Wipke-Tevis Deidre
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, College of Nursing, 4301 West Markham, AR 72205, USA.
Res Nurs Health. 2005 Jun;28(3):210-9. doi: 10.1002/nur.20079.
Rising nursing home (NH) costs and the poor quality of NH care make it important to recognize elders for whom NH care may be inappropriate. As a first step in developing a method to identify these elders, we examined the characteristics of NH residents requiring light-care and changes in their care level from NH admission to 12-months. Using data from the Missouri Minimal Data Set electronic database, we developed three care-level categories based on Resource Use Groups, Version III (RUG-III) and defined light-care NH residents as those requiring minimal assistance with late-loss ADLs (bed mobility, transfer, toilet use, or eating) and having no complex clinical problems. Approximately 16% of Missouri NH residents met the criteria for light-care. They had few functional problems with mobility, personal care, communication, or incontinence; approximately 33% had difficulty maintaining balance without assistance; and 50% of those admitted as light-care were still light-care at 12-months. Findings suggest that many NH residents classified as light-care by these criteria could be cared for in community settings offering fewer services than NHs.