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      Clinical Interventions in Aging (submit here)

      This international, peer-reviewed Open Access journal by Dove Medical Press focuses on prevention and treatment of diseases in people over 65 years of age. Sign up for email alerts here.

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      Nurse home visits with or without alert buttons versus usual care in the frail elderly: a randomized controlled trial

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          Abstract

          Objective

          To assess whether an intervention based on nurse home visits including alert buttons (NV+AB) is effective in reducing frailty compared to nurse home visits alone (NV-only) and usual care (control group) for older adults.

          Design

          Unblinded, randomized, controlled trial.

          Setting

          Insured population covered by the Mexican Social Security Institute living in the city of Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico.

          Participants

          Patients were aged over 60 years with a frailty index score higher than 0.14.

          Intervention

          After screening and informed consent, participants were allocated randomly to the control, NV+AB, or NV-only groups.

          Measurements

          The primary outcome was the frailty score 9 months later. Quality of life, depression, comorbidities, health status, and health service utilization were also considered.

          Results

          The framing sample included 819 patients. Of those, 591 were not located because they did not have a landline/telephone (341 patients), they had died (107), they were ill (50), or they were not currently living in the city (28). A screening interview was applied to 228 participants, and 57 had a score ≤0.14, 171 had ≥0.14, and 16 refused to complete the baseline questionnaire. A home visit was scheduled for 155 patients. However, 22 did not complete the baseline questionnaire. The final 133 subjects were randomized into the NV+AB (n = 45), NV-only (n = 44), and control (n = 44) groups. There were no statistically significant differences in the baseline characteristics of the groups. The mean age overall was 76.3 years (standard deviation 4.7) and 45% were men. At the baseline, 61.65% were classified as frail. At end of follow-up the adjusted prevalence of frailty in NV+AB group was 23.3% versus 58.3% in the control group.

          Conclusion:

          An intervention based on NV+AB seems to have a positive effect on frailty scores.

          Most cited references47

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          Applied Logistic Regression

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            Effectiveness of home based support for older people: systematic review and meta-analysis.

            To evaluate the effectiveness of home visiting programmes that offer health promotion and preventive care to older people. Systematic review and meta-analysis of 15 studies of home visiting. older people living at home, including frail older people at risk of adverse outcomes. Mortality, admission to hospital, admission to institutional care, functional status, health status. Home visiting was associated with a significant reduction in mortality. The pooled odds ratio for eight studies that assessed mortality in members of the general elderly population was 0.76 (95% confidence interval 0.64 to 0.89). Five studies of home visiting to frail older people who were at risk of adverse outcomes also showed a significant reduction in mortality (0.72; 0.54 to 0.97). Home visiting was associated with a significant reduction in admissions to long term institutional care in members of the general elderly population (0.65; 0.46 to 0.91). For three studies of home visiting to frail, "at risk" older people, the pooled odds ratio was 0.55 (0.35 to 0.88). Meta-analysis of six studies of home visiting to members of the general elderly population showed no significant reduction in admissions to hospital (odds ratio 0.95; 0.80 to 1.09). Three studies showed no significant effect on health (standardised effect size 0.06; -0.07 to 0.18). Four studies showed no effect on activities of daily living (0.05; -0.07 to 0.17). Home visits to older people can reduce mortality and admission to long term institutional care.
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              Impacts of e-health on the outcomes of care in low-and middle-income countries: where do we go from here?

              E-health encompasses a diverse set of informatics tools that have been designed to improve public health and health care. Little information is available on the impacts of e-health programmes, particularly in low-and middle-income countries. We therefore conducted a scoping review of the published and non-published literature to identify data on the effects of e-health on health outcomes and costs. The emphasis was on the identification of unanswered questions for future research, particularly on topics relevant to low-and middle-income countries. Although e-health tools supporting clinical practice have growing penetration globally, there is more evidence of benefits for tools that support clinical decisions and laboratory information systems than for those that support picture archiving and communication systems. Community information systems for disease surveillance have been implemented successfully in several low-and middle-income countries. Although information on outcomes is generally lacking, a large project in Brazil has documented notable impacts on health-system efficiency. Meta-analyses and rigorous trials have documented the benefits of text messaging for improving outcomes such as patients' self-care. Automated telephone monitoring and self-care support calls have been shown to improve some outcomes of chronic disease management, such as glycaemia and blood pressure control, in low-and middle-income countries. Although large programmes for e-health implementation and research are being conducted in many low-and middle-income countries, more information on the impacts of e-health on outcomes and costs in these settings is still needed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Clin Interv Aging
                Clin Interv Aging
                Clinical Interventions in Aging
                Dove Medical Press
                1176-9092
                1178-1998
                2013
                2013
                23 January 2013
                : 8
                : 85-95
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Center for Scientific Research and Higher Education of Ensenada, Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico;
                [2 ]Sonora Institute of Technology, Ciudad Obregon, Mexico;
                [3 ]National Institute of Respiratory Diseases, Mexican Ministry of Health, Mexico City, Mexico;
                [4 ]Epidemiologic and Health Service Research Unit, Aging Area, XXI Century National Medical Center, Mexican Institute of Social Security, Mexico City, Mexico;
                [5 ]School of Engineering, MyDCI, Autonomous University of Baja California, Mexicali, Mexico
                Author notes
                Correspondence: Carmen Garcia-Peña Unidad de Investigación Epidemiológica y en Servicios de Salud/Area de Envejecimiento, Edificio Corce, 3er piso, Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI, Av Cuauhtémoc #330, Col Doctores, Deleg Cuauhtémoc, 06725 México DF, México Tel +52 55 55 192 724 Email mcgarciapena@ 123456gmail.com
                Article
                cia-8-085
                10.2147/CIA.S38618
                3558028
                23378751
                7a72d70c-60c3-452d-9f4c-f2e809bf21c3
                © 2013 Favela et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd

                This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                Categories
                Original Research

                Health & Social care
                gerontechnology,frailty,elderly
                Health & Social care
                gerontechnology, frailty, elderly

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