Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1567489802> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W1567489802 abstract "Delirium is a common and distressing complication of a range of stressor events including infection, new medications and environment change that is often experienced by older people with frailty and dementia. Older people living in institutional long-term care (LTC)are at high risk of delirium, which increases the risk of admission to hospital, development of or worsening of dementia, and mortality.Delirium is also associated with substantial healthcare costs. Although it is possible to prevent delirium in the hospital setting by providing multicomponent delirium prevention interventions it is currently unclear whether interventions to prevent delirium in LTCare effective.To assess the effectiveness of interventions for preventing delirium in older people in long term care.We searched ALOIS (www.medicine.ox.ac.uk/alois) - the Cochrane Dementia and Cognitive Improvement Group's Specialised Register- on 23 April 2013. The search was as sensitive as possible to identify all studies on ALOIS relating to delirium. We ran additional separate searches in major healthcare databases, trial registers, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) and grey literature sources, to ensure that the search was as comprehensive as possible.We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and cluster-randomised controlled trials (cluster-RCTs) of single- and multi componentn on-pharmacological and pharmacological interventions for preventing delirium in older people (aged 65 years and over) in permanent LTC residence.Two independent review authors examined the titles and abstracts of citations identified by the search for eligibility and extracted data, with any disagreements settled by consensus. Primary outcomes were prevalence, incidence and severity of delirium. Secondary outcomes included new diagnosis of dementia, activities of daily living, quality of life and adverse outcomes. We used risk ratios (RRs)as measures of treatment effect for dichotomous outcomes and hazard ratios (HR) for time to event data.Main results We included two trials that recruited 3636 participants.Both were complex single-component non-pharmacological delirium prevention interventions. Risk of bias for many items was unclear due to inadequate reporting. Notably, there was no evidence of blinding of trial participants or assessors in either trial. One small cluster-RCT (n = 98) of a hydration-based intervention reported no reduction in delirium incidence in the intervention group compared to control (RR 0.85, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.18 to 4.00, analysis not adjusted for clustering, very low quality evidence). Results were imprecise and there were serious limitations evident in trial design.One large cluster-RCT (n = 3538) of a computerised system to identify medications that may contribute to delirium risk and trigger a pharmacist-led medication review reported a large reduction in delirium incidence (12-month HR 0.42, CI 0.34 to 0.51, moderat equality evidence) but no clear evidence of reduction in hospital admissions (HR 0.89, CI 0.72 to 1.10, moderate quality evidence), in mortality (HR 0.88, CI 0.66 to 1.17, moderate quality evidence) or in falls risk (HR 1.03, CI 0.92 to 1.15, moderate quality evidence).Authors' conclusions Our review identified very limited evidence on interventions for preventing deliriumin older people in LTC. Introduction of a software based intervention to identify medications that could contribute to delirium risk so that a pharmacist-led medication review and monitoring plan can be initiated may reduce incidence of delirium for older people in institutional LTC. This is based on one large RCT in the United States and may not be practical in other countries which do not have comparable information technology services available in care homes. Our review identified only one ongoing pilot trial of a multicomponent delirium prevention intervention and no trials of pharmacological agents. Future trials of computerised medication management systems and multicomponent non-pharmacological and pharmacological delirium prevention interventions for older people in LTC are needed to help inform the provision of evidence based care for this vulnerable group." @default.
- W1567489802 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1567489802 creator A5000532272 @default.
- W1567489802 creator A5005899204 @default.
- W1567489802 creator A5027877714 @default.
- W1567489802 creator A5070656741 @default.
- W1567489802 creator A5088678157 @default.
- W1567489802 date "2014-01-31" @default.
- W1567489802 modified "2023-10-10" @default.
- W1567489802 title "Interventions for preventing delirium in older people in institutional long-term care" @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1493802553 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1529276815 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1535266046 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1540086567 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1584685871 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1910603840 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1968823717 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1978502700 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1987537742 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1991952617 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W1999568669 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2009452211 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2011747218 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2013608868 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2021425602 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2032313326 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2033822752 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2037186326 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2050004747 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2054232191 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2064839408 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2066336525 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2071385197 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2074503009 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2080248973 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2081033553 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2081729270 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2103120487 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2125528441 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2126445511 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2142988453 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2144458512 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2149938672 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2163120748 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2169254853 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2169459416 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W2170304509 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W4213327235 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W4234646586 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W4246433802 @default.
- W1567489802 cites W4247665917 @default.
- W1567489802 doi "https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.cd009537.pub2" @default.
- W1567489802 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6478111" @default.
- W1567489802 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31012953" @default.
- W1567489802 hasPublicationYear "2014" @default.
- W1567489802 type Work @default.
- W1567489802 sameAs 1567489802 @default.
- W1567489802 citedByCount "57" @default.
- W1567489802 countsByYear W15674898022014 @default.
- W1567489802 countsByYear W15674898022015 @default.
- W1567489802 countsByYear W15674898022016 @default.
- W1567489802 countsByYear W15674898022017 @default.
- W1567489802 countsByYear W15674898022018 @default.
- W1567489802 countsByYear W15674898022019 @default.
- W1567489802 countsByYear W15674898022020 @default.
- W1567489802 countsByYear W15674898022021 @default.
- W1567489802 countsByYear W15674898022022 @default.
- W1567489802 countsByYear W15674898022023 @default.
- W1567489802 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1567489802 hasAuthorship W1567489802A5000532272 @default.
- W1567489802 hasAuthorship W1567489802A5005899204 @default.
- W1567489802 hasAuthorship W1567489802A5027877714 @default.
- W1567489802 hasAuthorship W1567489802A5070656741 @default.
- W1567489802 hasAuthorship W1567489802A5088678157 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C118552586 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C126322002 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C141071460 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C168563851 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C176400912 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C177713679 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C27415008 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C2779134260 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C2779483572 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C2779753318 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConcept C74909509 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C118552586 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C126322002 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C141071460 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C168563851 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C176400912 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C177713679 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C27415008 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C2779134260 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C2779483572 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C2779753318 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C71924100 @default.
- W1567489802 hasConceptScore W1567489802C74909509 @default.
- W1567489802 hasLocation W15674898021 @default.
- W1567489802 hasLocation W15674898022 @default.