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      Long-term effect on mortality of a home intervention that reduces functional difficulties in older adults: results from a randomized trial.

      Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
      Accidental Falls, prevention & control, Activities of Daily Living, classification, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Chronic Disease, mortality, rehabilitation, Combined Modality Therapy, Exercise Therapy, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Frail Elderly, statistics & numerical data, Home Care Services, Humans, Male, Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy Modalities, Prognosis, Risk Assessment, Safety, Social Environment, Survival Analysis

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          Abstract

          To evaluate the long-term mortality effect of a home-based intervention previously shown to reduce functional difficulties and whether survivorship benefits differ according to initial mortality risk level. Two-group randomized trial with survivorship followed up to 4 years from study entry. Homes of urban community-living elderly people. Three hundred nineteen adults aged 70 and older with difficulties performing daily activities. Occupational and physical therapy sessions to instruct participants in compensatory strategies, home modifications, home safety, fall recovery techniques, and balance and muscle strength exercises. Survival time was number of days between baseline interview and date of death, as determined using data from the National Death Index or December 31, 2005. Participants were stratified according to baseline mortality risk (low, moderate, high) using a prognostic indicator. At 2 years, intervention participants (n=160) had a 5.6% mortality rate (n=9 deaths) and controls (n=159) a 13.2% rate (n=21 deaths; P=.02). Mortality rates remained lower for intervention participants up to 3.5 years from study entry. At 2 years, intervention participants with moderate mortality risk had a 16.7% mortality rate (n=16 deaths/96), compared with 28.2% for equivalent control group participants (n=24 deaths/85; P=.02). By 3 years, mortality rates were not statistically significantly different between the experimental and control groups. The intervention extended survivorship up to 3.5 years and maintained statistically significant differences for 2 years. Subjects at moderate mortality risk derived the most intervention benefit. Findings suggest that the intervention could be a low-cost clinical tool to delay functional decline and mortality.

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