Factors Associated With the Trend of Physical and Chemical Restraint Use Among Long-Term Care Facility Residents in Hong Kong: Data From an 11-Year Observational Study

2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (12) ◽  
pp. 1043-1048 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kuen Lam ◽  
Joseph S.K. Kwan ◽  
Chi Wai Kwan ◽  
Alice M.L. Chong ◽  
Claudia K.Y. Lai ◽  
...  
1997 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine Hagan Hennessy ◽  
Elizabeth A. Mcneely ◽  
Frank J. Whittington ◽  
Dale C. Strasser ◽  
Constance K. Archea

2021 ◽  
Vol 106 (106(812)) ◽  
pp. 121-133
Author(s):  
M. Rivera-Izquierdo ◽  
A. Romero-Duarte ◽  
A. Cárdenas-Cruz

Objectives: To evaluate the main factors associated with prognosis (mortality, sequelae at 6 months and readmissions) of patients admitted for COVID-19 at the Hospital Clínico San Cecilio who live in a long-term care facility. Methods: Longitudinal observational study carried out on the cohort of 441 patients admitted for COVID-19 confirmed by PCR at the Hospital Clínico San Cecilio between 01/03/20 and 15/04/20. These patients were followed up, through their medical records, for 6 months after discharge. Sociodemographic, admission, clinical, therapeutic and sequelae variables were collected. Descriptive and bivariate analyses and multivariate logistic regression models were performed with R statistical software, through its R Commander tool. Results: The mean age of the cohort was 66.4 years (s=15.3), with 55.1% male. In-hospital mortality was 18.1%. Patients living in nursing homes had higher mean age and higher frequencies of comorbidities, mortality and hospital readmissions. During the 6 months after discharge, they had a high frequency of sequelae (59%), and a higher frequency of confusion, hematologic and nephrological problems, and superinfections. The main factors associated with mortality were advanced age, male sex, admission to the ICU and vulnerability at admission measured with clinical prognostic scales. Conclusions: Living in a long-term care facility was not an independent factor of mortality, but it did bring together a group of special vulnerability to COVID-19. The causes of mortality analysed in this study could be similar to the causes of mortality of elderly people in nursing homes during the first months of the pandemic. These data should serve to optimize strategies for in-hospital management and follow-up of the elderly during the months following hospital discharge, and to try to reduce the unrecorded mortality due to COVID-19 in this population.


Author(s):  
Lauren M. Robins ◽  
Den-Ching A. Lee ◽  
J Simon Bell ◽  
Velandai Srikanth ◽  
Ralph Möhler ◽  
...  

This systematic review aimed to identify thematic elements within definitions of physical and chemical restraint, compare explicit and implicit definitions, and synthesize reliability and validity of studies examining physical and/or chemical restraint use in long-term care. Studies were included that measured prevalence of physical and/or chemical restraint use, or evaluated an intervention to reduce restraint use in long-term care. 86 papers were included in this review, all discussed physical restraint use and 20 also discussed chemical restraint use. Seven themes were generated from definitions including: restraint method, setting resident is restrained in, stated intent, resident capacity to remove/control, caveats and exclusions, duration, frequency or number, and consent and resistance. None of the studies reported validity of measurement approaches. Inter-rater reliability was reported in 27 studies examining physical restraint use, and only one study of chemical restraint. Results were compared to an existing consensus definition of physical restraint, which was found to encompass many of the thematic domains found within explicit definitions. However, studies rarely applied measurement approaches that reflected all of the identified themes of definitions. It is necessary for a consensus definition of chemical restraint to be established and for measurement approaches to reflect the elements of definitions.


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