Baker Philip R A, Francis Daniel P, Hairi Noran N, Othman Sajaratulnisah, Choo Wan Yuen
School of Public Health and Social Work, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 4059.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Aug 16;2016(8):CD010321. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010321.pub2.
Maltreatment of older people (elder abuse) includes psychological, physical, sexual abuse, neglect and financial exploitation. Evidence suggests that 10% of older adults experience some form of abuse, and only a fraction of cases are actually reported or referred to social services agencies. Elder abuse is associated with significant morbidity and premature mortality. Numerous interventions have been implemented to address the issue of elder maltreatment. It is, however, unclear which interventions best serve to prevent or reduce elder abuse.
The objective of this review was to assess the effectiveness of primary, secondary and tertiary intervention programmes used to reduce or prevent abuse of the elderly in their own home, in organisational or institutional and community settings. The secondary objective was to investigate whether intervention effects are modified by types of abuse, types of participants, setting of intervention, or the cognitive status of older people.
We searched 19 databases (AgeLine, CINAHL, Psycinfo, MEDLINE, Embase, Proquest Central, Social Services Abstracts, ASSIA, Sociological Abstracts, ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global, Web of Science, LILACS, EPPI, InfoBase, CENTRAL, HMIC, Opengrey and Zetoc) on 12 platforms, including multidisciplinary disciplines covering medical, health, social sciences, social services, legal, finance and education. We also browsed related organisational websites, contacted authors of relevant articles and checked reference lists. Searches of databases were conducted between 30 August 2015 and 16 March 2016 and were not restricted by language.
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs), cluster-randomised trials, and quasi-RCTs, before-and-after studies, and interrupted time series. Only studies with at least 12 weeks of follow-up investigating the effect of interventions in preventing or reducing abuse of elderly people and those who interact with the elderly were included.
Two review authors independently extracted data and assessed the studies' risk of bias. Studies were categorised as: 1) education on elder abuse, 2) programmes to reduce factors influencing elder abuse, 3) specific policies for elder abuse, 4) legislation on elder abuse, 5) programmes to increase detection rate on elder abuse, 6) programmes targeted to victims of elder abuse, and 7) rehabilitation programmes for perpetrators of elder abuse. All studies were assessed for study methodology, intervention type, setting, targeted audience, intervention components and intervention intensity.
The search and selection process produced seven eligible studies which included a total of 1924 elderly participants and 740 other people. Four of the above seven categories of interventions were evaluated by included studies that varied in study design. Eligible studies of rehabilitation programmes, specific policies for elder abuse and legislation on elder abuse were not found. All included studies contained a control group, with five of the seven studies describing the method of allocation as randomised. We used the Cochrane 'Risk of bias' tool and EPOC assessment criteria to assess risk of bias. The results suggest that risk of bias across the included body of research was high, with at least 40% of the included studies judged as being at high risk of bias. Only one study was judged as having no domains at high risk of bias, with two studies having two of 11 domains at high risk. One study was judged as being at high risk of bias across eight of 11 domains.All included studies were set in high-income countries, as determined by the World Bank economic classification (USA four, Taiwan one, UK two). None of the studies provided specific information or analysis on equity considerations, including by socio-economic disadvantage, although one study was described as being set in a housing project. One study performed some form of cost-effectiveness analysis on the implementation of their intervention programmes, although there were few details on the components and analysis of the costing.We are uncertain whether these interventions reduce the occurrence or recurrence of elder abuse due to variation in settings, measures and effects reported in the included studies, some of which were very small and at a high risk of bias (low- and very low-quality evidence).Two studies measured the occurrence of elder abuse. A high risk of bias study found a difference in the post-test scores (P value 0.048 and 0.18). In a low risk of bias study there was no difference found (adjusted odds ratio (OR) =0.48, 95% 0.18 to 1.27) (n = 214). For interventions measuring abuse recurrence, one small study (n = 16) reported no difference in post-test means, whilst another found higher levels of abuse reported for the intervention arms (Cox regression, combined intervention hazard ratio (HR) = 1.78, alpha level = 0.01).It is uncertain whether targeted educational interventions improve the relevant knowledge of health professionals and caregivers (very low-quality evidence), although they may improve detection of resident-to-resident abuse. The concept of measuring improvement in detection or reporting as opposed to measuring the occurrence or recurrence of abuse is complicated. An intervention of public education and support services aimed at victims may also improve rates of reporting, however it is unclear whether this was due to an increase in abuse recurrence or better reporting of abuse.The effectiveness of service planning interventions at improving the assessment and documentation of related domains is uncertain. Unintended outcomes were not reported in the studies.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is inadequate trustworthy evidence to assess the effects of elder abuse interventions on occurrence or recurrence of abuse, although there is some evidence to suggest it may change the combined measure of anxiety and depression of caregivers. There is a need for high-quality trials, including from low- or middle-income countries, with adequate statistical power and appropriate study characteristics to determine whether specific intervention programmes, and which components of these programmes, are effective in preventing or reducing abuse episodes among the elderly. It is uncertain whether the use of educational interventions improves knowledge and attitude of caregivers, and whether such programmes also reduce occurrence of abuse, thus future research is warranted. In addition, all future research should include a component of cost-effectiveness analysis, implementation assessment and equity considerations of the specific interventions under review.
虐待老年人(老年虐待)包括心理、身体、性虐待、忽视和经济剥削。有证据表明,10%的老年人经历过某种形式的虐待,而实际报告或转介给社会服务机构的案例只是其中一小部分。老年虐待与严重的发病率和过早死亡有关。已经实施了许多干预措施来解决老年虐待问题。然而,尚不清楚哪种干预措施最有助于预防或减少老年虐待。
本综述的目的是评估用于减少或预防老年人在自己家中、组织或机构以及社区环境中受到虐待的一级、二级和三级干预计划的有效性。次要目的是调查干预效果是否因虐待类型、参与者类型、干预环境或老年人的认知状态而有所改变。
我们在12个平台上搜索了19个数据库(老年医学数据库、护理学与健康领域数据库、心理学文摘数据库、医学期刊数据库、荷兰医学文摘数据库、ProQuest中央数据库、社会服务摘要数据库、亚洲社会科学索引数据库、社会学文摘数据库、ProQuest全球学位论文数据库、科学引文索引数据库、拉丁美洲和加勒比卫生科学数据库、教育心理学文摘数据库、信息数据库、考科蓝对照试验中心注册库、英国医学期刊数据库、开放灰色文献数据库和Zetoc数据库),涵盖医学、健康、社会科学、社会服务、法律、金融和教育等多学科领域。我们还浏览了相关组织的网站,联系了相关文章的作者并检查了参考文献列表。数据库检索于2015年8月30日至2016年3月16日进行,不受语言限制。
我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCT)、整群随机试验和半随机对照试验、前后对照研究以及中断时间序列研究。仅纳入了至少有12周随访时间、调查干预措施对预防或减少老年人虐待以及与老年人互动者虐待效果的研究。
两位综述作者独立提取数据并评估研究的偏倚风险。研究被分类为:1)老年虐待教育,2)减少影响老年虐待因素的计划,3)老年虐待的具体政策,4)老年虐待立法,5)提高老年虐待检测率的计划,6)针对老年虐待受害者的计划,7)老年虐待施暴者的康复计划。所有研究均评估了研究方法、干预类型、环境、目标受众、干预组成部分和干预强度。
检索和筛选过程产生了7项符合条件的研究,共纳入1924名老年人参与者和740名其他人员。上述七类干预措施中的四类在不同研究设计的纳入研究中得到了评估。未找到关于康复计划、老年虐待具体政策和老年虐待立法的符合条件的研究。所有纳入研究均包含一个对照组,七项研究中有五项将分配方法描述为随机。我们使用考科蓝“偏倚风险”工具和EPOC评估标准来评估偏倚风险。结果表明,纳入的研究整体偏倚风险较高,至少40%的纳入研究被判定为高偏倚风险。只有一项研究被判定没有高偏倚风险领域,两项研究在11个领域中有两个领域为高偏倚风险。一项研究在11个领域中的八个领域被判定为高偏倚风险。根据世界银行经济分类,所有纳入研究均来自高收入国家(美国四项、台湾一项、英国两项)。尽管有一项研究描述是在一个住房项目中开展,但没有一项研究提供关于公平性考虑的具体信息或分析,包括社会经济劣势方面。一项研究对其干预计划的实施进行了某种形式的成本效益分析,尽管成本计算的组成部分和分析细节很少。由于纳入研究中报告的环境、措施和效果存在差异,其中一些差异非常小且偏倚风险高(低质量和极低质量证据),我们不确定这些干预措施是否能减少老年虐待的发生或复发。两项研究测量了老年虐待的发生率。一项高偏倚风险研究发现测试后得分存在差异(P值分别为0.048和0.18)。在一项低偏倚风险研究中未发现差异(调整后的优势比(OR)=0.48,95%置信区间为0.18至1.27)(n = 214)。对于测量虐待复发的干预措施,一项小型研究(n = 16)报告测试后均值无差异,而另一项研究发现干预组报告的虐待水平更高(Cox回归,联合干预风险比(HR)= 1.78,α水平 = 0.01)。虽然有证据表明有针对性的教育干预可能会提高卫生专业人员和护理人员的相关知识,但不确定其是否能提高他们对虐待的检测能力(极低质量证据)。测量检测或报告改善情况与测量虐待的发生或复发情况的概念较为复杂。一项针对受害者的公共教育和支持服务干预措施可能也会提高报告率,但尚不清楚这是由于虐待复发增加还是对虐待的报告更好。服务规划干预措施在改善相关领域评估和记录方面的有效性尚不确定。研究中未报告意外结果。
虽然有一些证据表明老年虐待干预措施可能会改变护理人员焦虑和抑郁的综合指标,但目前缺乏足够可靠的证据来评估其对虐待发生或复发的影响。需要开展高质量的试验,包括来自低收入或中等收入国家的试验,具备足够的统计效力和合适的研究特征,以确定特定的干预计划及其哪些组成部分能有效预防或减少老年人中的虐待事件。不确定教育干预措施的使用是否能提高护理人员的知识和态度,以及此类计划是否也能减少虐待的发生,因此未来有必要进行研究。此外,所有未来的研究都应包括对所审查的特定干预措施的成本效益分析、实施评估和公平性考虑。