Abstract

BackgroundFew have studied how personal activities of daily living (P-ADL) develop over time in nursing home residents with dementia. Thus, the aim was to study variables associated with the development of P-ADL functioning over a 52-month follow-up period, with a particular focus on the importance of the degree of dementia.MethodIn all, 932 nursing home residents with dementia (Clinical Dementia Rating–CDR- Scale ≥1) were included in a longitudinal study with four assessments of P-ADL functioning during 52 months. P-ADL was measured using the Lawton and Brody’s Physical Self-Maintenance Scale. Degree of dementia (CDR), neuropsychiatric symptoms and use of psychotropic medication were assessed at the same four time points. Demographic information and information about physical health was included at baseline. Linear regression models for longitudinal data were estimated.ResultsFollow-up time was positively associated with a decline in P-ADL functioning. Degree of dementia at baseline was associated with a decline in P-ADL functioning over time. The association between degree of dementia and P-ADL functioning was strongest at baseline, and then flattened over time. A higher level of neuropsychiatric symptoms such as agitation and apathy and no use of anxiolytics and antidementia medication were associated with a decline in P-ADL functioning at four time points. Higher physical co-morbidity at baseline was associated with a decline in P-ADL functioning.ConclusionP-ADL functioning in nursing home patients with dementia worsened over time. The worsening was associated with more severe dementia, higher physical comorbidity, agitation, apathy and no use of anxiolytics and antidementia medication. Clinicians should pay attention to these variables (associates) in order to help the nursing home residents with dementia to maintain their level of functioning for as long as possible.

Highlights

  • Few have studied how personal activities of daily living (P-ADL) develop over time in nursing home residents with dementia

  • Degree of dementia at baseline was associated with a decline in P-ADL functioning over time

  • A higher level of neuropsychiatric symptoms such as agitation and apathy and no use of anxiolytics and antidementia medication were associated with a decline in P-ADL functioning at four time points

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Summary

Introduction

Few have studied how personal activities of daily living (P-ADL) develop over time in nursing home residents with dementia. The prevalence of dementia increases with age, from approximately 1.5% in persons aged 60– 69 years to 40% in persons 90 years and older [2]. The prevalence of dementia is found to be high in nursing home residents in the Western countries [3,4,5,6]. Dementia will negatively affect the person’s ability both to function adequately in everyday life and to perform personal activities of daily living (P-ADL), such as bathing, dressing, eating, grooming, ambulation/ transferring and toileting [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]. P-ADL impairment in older persons increases the risk of mortality [22,23,24,25]

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