Despite there being a considerable number of meta-analyses and reviews synthesizing the nurse in-home visiting literature, there have been no reviews examining nurse in-home visiting for patients who are already disabled. This article presents a literature review and synthesis of 10 trials targeted on older adults with disability. The review is organized into structure and process components related to the outcome variable disability based on the classic Donabedian model. The review suggests that the components of in-home visiting associated with favorable disability outcomes include multiple home visits, geriatric training and experience, health provider collaboration, multidimensional assessment, and theory use. In contrast, lack of process measures, physician collaboration, training, and specific intervention components targeting disability are associated with ineffective interventions. This review helps provide insight into variables that influence disability outcomes as well as the development of best-practice models of in-home visiting to older adults with existing disability.
If confirmed in other studies, this intervention holds the potential to reduce the rate of functional decline and improve satisfaction for Medicare beneficiaries with ADL dependence.
Policy challenges are associated with ways in which home health care is fiscally organized primarily to address patients' physical and acute skilled care needs and not depression.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of a primary care affiliated disease management-health promotion nurse intervention on paid personal assistance (PA) use and expenditures among Medicare beneficiaries with disabilities. We analyzed data on 570 community-dwelling Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 years and older who participated in the Medicare Primary and Consumer-Directed Care Demonstration, a randomized controlled trial. We estimated a two-part model to test the effect of the nurse intervention on PA use and expenditures during the 2 years after study entry. Adjusting for covariates, average annual PA expenditures were $1,464 (29%) lower per person in the intervention group as compared to the control group. The findings of this study will help policy makers and practitioners understand the potential benefit of primary care affiliated nurse home visiting interventions on PA expenditures.
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