Abstract

This Campbell systematic review assesses the effectiveness of home visits in preventing impairment, institutionalization, and death in older adults, as well as identifying factors that may moderate effects. The review summarises findings from 64 studies.Overall, home visits are not effective in maintaining the health and autonomy of community‐dwelling older adults. Preventive home visits did not reduce absolute mortality, and did not have a significant overall effect on the number of people who were institutionalised.There is high‐quality evidence of no effect on falls from interventions targeting fall prevention. There is low‐quality evidence of small statistically significant positive effects for functioning and quality of life.It is possible that some programmes have modest effects on institutionalisation and hospitalisation. However, heterogeneity in target population and intervention design, as well as poor reporting of in studies of design, implementation and the control condition make this difficult to determine.Executive summaryBACKGROUNDHome visits by health and social care professionals aim to prevent cognitive and functional impairment, thus reducing institutionalisation and prolonging life. Visitors may provide health information, investigate untreated or sub‐optimally treated problems, encourage compliance with medical care, and provide referrals to services. Previous reviews have reached varying conclusions about their effectiveness. This review sought to assess the effectiveness of preventive home visits for older adults (65+ years) and to identify factors that may moderate effects.OBJECTIVESTo systematically review evidence on the effectiveness of preventive home visits for older adults, and to identify factors that may moderate effects.SEARCH STRATEGYWe searched the following electronic databases through December 2012 without language restrictions: British Nursing Index and Archive, C2‐SPECTR, CINAHL, CENTRAL, EMBASE, IBSS, Medline, Nursing Full Text Plus, PsycINFO, and Sociological Abstracts. Reference lists from previous reviews and from included studies were also examined.SELECTION CRITERIAWe included randomised controlled trials enrolling persons without dementia aged over 65 years and living at home. Interventions included visits at home by a health or social care professional that were not directly related to recent hospital discharge. Interventions were compared to usual care, wait‐list, or attention controls.DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSISTwo authors independently extracted data from included studies in pre‐specified domains, assessed risk of bias using the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool, and rated the quality of evidence using GRADE criteria. Outcomes were pooled using random effects models. We analyzed effects on mortality, institutionalization, hospitalization, falls, injuries, physical functioning, cognitive functioning, quality of life, and psychiatric illness.RESULTSSixty‐four studies with 28642 participants were included. There was high quality evidence that home visits did not reduce absolute mortality at longest follow‐up (Risk ratio=0.93 [0.87 to 0.99]; Risk difference=0.00 [‐0.01 to 0.00]). There was moderate quality evidence of no clinically or statistically significant overall effect on the number of people who were institutionalised (Risk ratio=1.02 [0.88, 1.18]) or hospitalised (Risk ratio=0.96 [0.91, 1.01]) during the studies. There was high quality evidence of no statistically significant effect on the number of people who fell (Odds ratio=0.86 [0.73, 1.01]). There was low quality evidence of statistically significant effects for quality of life (Standardised mean difference=‐0.06 [‐0.11, ‐0.01]) and very low quality evidence of statistically significant effects for functioning (SMD=‐0.10 [‐0.17, ‐0.03]), but these overall effects may not be clinically significant. However, there was heterogeneity in settings, types of visitor, focus of visits, and control groups. We cannot exclude the possibility that some programmes were associated with meaningful benefits.AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONSWe were unable to identify reliable effects of home visits overall or in any subset of the studies in this review. It is possible that some home visiting programmes have beneficial effects for community‐dwelling older adults, but poor reporting of how interventions and comparisons were implemented prevents more robust conclusions. While it is difficult to draw firm conclusions given these limitations, estimates of treatment effects are statistically precise, and further small studies of multi‐component interventions compared with usual care would be unlikely to change the conclusions of this review. If researchers continue to evaluate these types of interventions, they should begin with a clear theory of change, clearly describe the programme theory of change and implementation, and report all outcomes measured.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe development and promotion of interventions to maintain quality of life of older adults is a public health priority (Cruz-Jentoft et al, 2008; Gustaffson, Edberg, Johansson, & Dahlin-Ivanoff, 2009; World Health Organization, 2003) and a central challenge to current medical and social care systems (Elkan & Kendrick, 2004; Johri, Beland, & Bergman, 2003)

  • 1.1 DESCRIPTION OF THE CONDITIONAbout 13% of Americans and 15-20% of Europeans are over 65 years old (United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division, 2011)

  • It is possible that some home visiting programmes have beneficial effects for community-dwelling older adults, but poor reporting of how interventions and comparisons were implemented prevents more robust conclusions

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Summary

Introduction

The development and promotion of interventions to maintain quality of life of older adults is a public health priority (Cruz-Jentoft et al, 2008; Gustaffson, Edberg, Johansson, & Dahlin-Ivanoff, 2009; World Health Organization, 2003) and a central challenge to current medical and social care systems (Elkan & Kendrick, 2004; Johri, Beland, & Bergman, 2003). Advances in technology, and recent global economic crises have led to an international imperative for health services to reform the organisation of care in order to best meet the needs of older people while making efficient use of scarce resources (Conroy, Stevens, Parker, & Gladman, 2011; Markle-Reid et al, 2006). The impact of falls-related injuries on quality of life in older adults and on health care systems is substantial (Moyer, 2012), making the prevention of falls an important issue in health reform (RAND, 2004). Team-based approaches incorporating geriatric screening and assessment have been incorporated into health care systems in the UK (Department of Health, 2001) and across various countries in the EU (Leichsenring, 2004)

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