Department of Occupational Therapy, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel.
Division of Geriatrics, Maccabi Healthcare Services, Modiin 7178051, Israel.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Jan 30;19(3):1616. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19031616.
Participation, which is involvement in life situations, is an important indicator of human health and well-being of older adults. Frailty is known to be related to difficulties in activities of daily living (ADL) but the association with participation restriction has not been sufficiently researched. Therefore, we aimed to (1) to assess the correlations between frailty, ADL, and participation; and (2) to identify the contribution of frailty to explaining the participation restriction of older adults.
A cross-sectional study included home visits to community-dwelling older adults aged 75 and older. The Reintegration to Normal Living Index (RNL-I) assessed participation, PRISMA-7 assessed frailty, and the Functional Independence Measure and IADL questionnaire assessed the basic and instrumental ADL. Cognition, which may explain participation, was also assessed (The Montreal Cognitive Assessment) and demographic information was collected.
Older adults (N = 121, 60 women), aged 75 to 91 years (mean (SD)-79.6 (3.1)), were included. Older adults demonstrated full to restricted participation (RNL-I-mean (SD)-78.2 (18.0)/100). Frailty was identified in 39 (32%) older adults (mean (SD) PRISMA-7-2.9 (1.4)/7points). A negative moderate significant correlation was found between participation and frailty (r = -0.634, < 0.001). The variance of participation was significantly explained by frailty, 31.5%, and basic ADL, 5.6% (after controlling for age and cognition); the total model explained 44.6% (F = 23.29, < 0.001).
Frailty is significantly associated with participation restriction. Since participation has many health benefits, understanding which factors are associated to participation is central to developing interventions for older adults. These findings may help health professionals in the future develop interventions for maintaining and promoting the participation of older adults.
参与度是指生活情境中的参与程度,是老年人健康和幸福的重要指标。众所周知,衰弱与日常生活活动(ADL)困难有关,但与参与受限的关联尚未得到充分研究。因此,我们旨在:(1)评估衰弱、ADL 和参与度之间的相关性;(2)确定衰弱对解释老年人参与受限的贡献。
本研究采用横断面研究方法,对居住在社区的 75 岁及以上老年人进行家访。Reintegration to Normal Living Index(RNL-I)评估参与度,PRISMA-7 评估衰弱程度,功能独立性量表和 IADL 问卷评估基本和工具性 ADL。可能解释参与度的认知功能也进行了评估(蒙特利尔认知评估),并收集了人口统计学信息。
共纳入 121 名老年人(60 名女性),年龄 75 至 91 岁(平均(SD)-79.6(3.1)岁)。老年人表现出充分至受限的参与度(RNL-I-平均(SD)-78.2(18.0)/100)。39 名(32%)老年人被诊断为衰弱(PRISMA-7 平均(SD)-2.9(1.4)/7 分)。参与度与衰弱呈显著负相关(r = -0.634,<0.001)。衰弱解释了参与度方差的 31.5%,基本 ADL 解释了 5.6%(在控制年龄和认知功能后);总模型解释了 44.6%(F = 23.29,<0.001)。
衰弱与参与受限显著相关。由于参与度有许多健康益处,了解哪些因素与参与度相关对于为老年人制定干预措施至关重要。这些发现可能有助于未来的卫生保健专业人员为维持和促进老年人的参与制定干预措施。