A multidisciplinary intervention program improved the outcome after hip fracture for people with dementia—Subgroup analyses of a randomized controlled trial

Category Primary study
JournalArchives of gerontology and geriatrics
Year 2012

This article is included in 2 Systematic reviews Systematic reviews (2 references)

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Abstract:

BACKGROUND:

People with cognitive impairment and dementia have a poor outcome after a hip fracture surgery, about 30–50% of all those who sustain a hip fracture have dementia. Therefore the aim was to investigate whether a multidisciplinary postoperative intervention program could reduce postoperative complications and improve functional recovery among people with dementia.

METHODS:

A randomized controlled trial with subgroup analyses among patients with dementia. Sixty-four patients with femoral neck fracture, aged ≥70 years at Umeå University Hospital, Sweden. The intervention consisted of staff education, individualized care planning and rehabilitation, active prevention, detection and treatment of postoperative complications, especially delirium. The staff worked in teams to apply comprehensive geriatric assessment, management and rehabilitation, including a follow-up at 4 months postoperatively. The control group followed conventional postoperative routines.

RESULTS:

There were fewer postoperative complications in the intervention group such as urinary tract infections, p =0.001; nutritional problems, p =0.025; postoperative delirium, p =0.002; falls, p =0.006. At 4 months a larger proportion in the intervention group had regained their previous independent indoor walking ability performance, p =0.005. At 12 months a larger proportion in the intervention group had regained the activities of daily living (ADL) performance level they had before the fracture, p =0.027.

CONCLUSION:

This study demonstrates that patients with dementia who suffer a hip fracture can benefit from multidisciplinary geriatric assessment and rehabilitation and should not be excluded from rehabilitation programs.
Epistemonikos ID: 3e4556a2b0ba68a2041b937524e8e9ae6a6b7fc8
First added on: Jul 31, 2015