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Rehabilitation after hip fracture for nursing home residents: a controlled feasibility trial

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posted on 2019-10-10, 08:35 authored by Lauren A. Beaupre, Jay S. Magaziner, Allyson C. Jones, Gian S. Jhangri, William C. Johnston, Donna M. Wilson, Sumit R. Majumdar
Background This study compared functional outcomes at 3 months after hip fracture surgery between nursing home residents participating in a 10-week outreach rehabilitation program and those receiving usual care. Function, health-related quality of life, and mortality were also compared over 12 months, and outreach program feasibility was assessed. Methods A feasibility trial was undertaken in Canadian nursing homes; of 77 participants, 46 were allocated to Outreach and 31 to Control prior to assessing function or cognition. Outreach participants received 10 weeks of rehabilitation (30 sessions), and Control participants received usual posthospital fracture care in their nursing homes. The primary outcome was the Functional Independence Measure Physical Domain (FIMphysical) score 3 months post-fracture; we also explored FIM Locomotion and Mobility. Secondary outcomes were FIM scores, EQ-5D-3L scores, and mortality over 12 months. Program feasibility was also evaluated. Results The mean age was 88.7 ± 7.0 years, 55 (71%) were female, and 58 (75%) had severe cognitive impairment with no significant group differences (p > .14). Outreach participants had significantly higher FIM Locomotion than usual care (p = .02), but no significant group differences were seen in FIMphysical or FIM Mobility score 3 months post-fracture. In adjusted analyses, Outreach participants reported significant improvements in all FIM and EQ-5D-3L scores compared with Control participants over 12 months (p < .05). Mortality did not differ by group (p = .80). Thirty (65%) Outreach participants completed the program. Conclusions Our feasibility trial demonstrated that Outreach participants achieved better locomotion by 3 months post-fracture compared with participants receiving usual postfracture care; benefits were sustained to 12 months post-fracture. In adjusted analyses, Outreach participants also showed sustained benefits in physical function and health-related quality of life.

History

Publication

The Journals of Gerontology: Series A;74 (9) pp. 1518-1525

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Note

peer-reviewed

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This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication inThe Journals of Gerontology: Series A following peer review. The version of record "Rehabilitation after hip fracture for nursing home residents: a controlled feasibility trial" is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.9b04619.

Language

English

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