Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY.
Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY.
J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2018 Dec;19(12):1104-1109.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.jamda.2018.09.010. Epub 2018 Nov 6.
We measured the prevalence and severity of aggressive behaviors (ABs) among nursing home (NH) residents and examined whether individuals with behavioral health disorders were more likely to exhibit aggressive behaviors than others.
The analytical sample included 3,270,713 first Minimum Data Set (MDS) assessments for residents in 15,706 NHs in 2015.
Individuals were identified as having (1) behavioral health disorders only (hierarchically categorized as schizophrenia/psychosis, bipolar disorder, personality disorder, substance abuse, depression/anxiety); (2) dementia only; (3) behavioral health disorders and dementia; or (4) neither. The Aggressive Behavior Scale (ABS) measured the degree of aggressive behaviors exhibited, based on 4 MDS items (verbal, physical, other behavioral symptoms, and rejection of care). The ABS scores ranged from 0 to 12 reflecting symptom severity as none (ABS score = 0), mild (ABS score = 1-2), moderate (ABS score = 3-5), and severe (ABS score = 6-12). Bivariate comparisons and multinomial logistic regressions were performed.
Residents with behavioral health disorders and dementia had the highest prevalence of ABs (23.1%), followed by dementia only (15.3%), behavioral health disorders only (9.3%), and neither (5.3%). After controlling for individual risk factors and facility covariates, the relative risk of exhibiting severe ABs was 2.47, 5.50, and 9.42 for residents with behavioral health disorders only, dementia only, and behavioral health disorders and dementia, respectively, with a similar pattern for moderate or mild ABs.
Residents with behavioral health disorders were less likely than residents with dementia to exhibit aggressive behaviors in nursing homes. Thus, anecdotally reported concerns that aggressive behaviors are primarily an issue for residents with behavioral health disorders, rather than those with dementia, were not empirically justified.
我们测量了养老院(NH)居民中攻击性行为(ABs)的流行程度和严重程度,并研究了是否有行为健康障碍的个体比其他人更有可能表现出攻击性行为。
分析样本包括 2015 年 15706 家 NH 中 3270713 名首次最低数据集(MDS)评估的居民。
个体被确定为(1)仅患有行为健康障碍(按层次分类为精神分裂症/精神病、双相情感障碍、人格障碍、物质滥用、抑郁/焦虑);(2)仅患有痴呆症;(3)患有行为健康障碍和痴呆症;或(4)两者都没有。根据 4 项 MDS 项目(言语、身体、其他行为症状和拒绝护理),攻击性行为量表(ABS)测量了表现出的攻击性行为的程度。ABS 评分范围为 0 到 12,反映了症状的严重程度,分别为无(ABS 得分为 0)、轻度(ABS 得分为 1-2)、中度(ABS 得分为 3-5)和严重(ABS 得分为 6-12)。进行了二元比较和多项逻辑回归。
患有行为健康障碍和痴呆症的居民 ABs 患病率最高(23.1%),其次是仅痴呆症(15.3%)、仅行为健康障碍(9.3%)和两者都没有(5.3%)。在控制了个体风险因素和设施协变量后,仅患有行为健康障碍、仅患有痴呆症和患有行为健康障碍和痴呆症的居民表现出严重 ABs 的相对风险分别为 2.47、5.50 和 9.42,中度或轻度 ABs 也呈现类似模式。
患有行为健康障碍的居民比患有痴呆症的居民更不可能在养老院表现出攻击性行为。因此,关于攻击性行为主要是行为健康障碍患者而非痴呆症患者的问题的传闻,没有得到实证支持。