Title of article :
PREDICTING FUNCTIONAL ADVERSE OUTCOMES IN HOSPITALIZED
OLDER PATIENTS: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF SCREENING TOOLS
Author/Authors :
M. DE SAINT-HUBERT1، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
Background: Functional decline frequently occurs following hospitalisation in older people and may
be prevented or minimized by specific management. Such care processes needs appropriate early screening of
older hospitalized patients. Objective: To identify instruments able to detect on admission older hospitalized
patients at risk of functional decline at and after discharge. Methods: Functional decline is defined as loss of
independence in activities of daily living (functional decline) or admission in nursing home. The systematic
search used Medline 1970-2007, Web of Science 1981-2007 and references list of relevant papers. An
independent epidemiologist assessed methodological quality of the retained articles. Results: We found 12
studies developing predictive tools, including 7145 patients. Functional outcomes were assessed at or after
discharge. Preadmission functional status, cognition, and social support were major components for prediction of
functional evolution. Few instruments are fully validated and data concerning reliability are often lacking.
Operational characteristics are moderate (sensitivity 29-87%, negative likelihood ratio 0.2-0.8). Conclusions:
Instruments predicting functional adverse outcomes are difficult to compare due to heterogeneity of functional
outcomes and hospital settings. The reason why so many tools have been developed is probably because none
gives full satisfaction: their general predictive validity and performances are insufficient. Further research is
needed to improve the screening of frail older patients admitted to hospital with standardized and validated tools
Keywords :
predictive tool , Hospital admission , Frail Elderly , Functional decline
Journal title :
The journal of nutrition, health & aging
Journal title :
The journal of nutrition, health & aging