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Sökning: (AMNE:(MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES Clinical Medicine Geriatrics)) srt2:(2020-2021) conttype:(scientificother) > (2021)

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1.
  • Karlsson, Åsa, 1972- (författare)
  • Team-based home rehabilitation after hip fracture in older adults : effects, experiences and impact of dementia
  • 2021
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • BACKGROUND: For an older adult a hip fracture may be a traumatic and life-changing event and has shown to be associated with reduced health-related quality of life, disability and increased mortality. Previous rehabilitation studies have often excluded older adults with cognitive impairment and those living in residential care facilities, groups with an additional risk of poor outcome. Moreover, there are few randomized controlled trials that have evaluated interdisciplinary home rehabilitation after hip fracture. These studies did not include older adults with severe cognitive impairment or dementia, those with serious medical conditions, or those living in residential care.OBJECTIVE: The aim of the thesis was to investigate the effects of early discharge followed by geriatric interdisciplinary home rehabilitation (GIHR) for older adults with hip fracture, and specifically among those with dementia, compared to in-hospital geriatric care according to a multifactorial rehabilitation program. An additional aim was to explore how older adults experienced their rehabilitation and recovery during the year following the fracture.METHODS: The thesis evaluated a randomized controlled trial that included 205 participants with hip fracture, 70 years or older, living in ordinary housing or residential care facilities. In hospital, both the GIHR and control groups received care and rehabilitation according to a multifactorial rehabilitation program, but with the aim of early discharge for the GIHR group. The individually designed GIHR intervention focused on walking ability indoors and outdoors, independence in activities of daily living (ADL), and multifactorial fall prevention during a maximum period of 10 weeks. Participants were assessed in-hospital and at 3- and 12-month follow-up visits. Independence in walking and use of walking aids was assessed via an interview along with gait speed tests. Independence in ADL was measured using the Barthel ADL Index, and the ADL Staircase including the Katz ADL Index, and hospital length of stay (LOS) was recorded from medical charts. The effects of GIHR intervention among participants with dementia were investigated in a post hoc subgroup analysis where additional outcomes were falls, mortality and readmissions between discharge and 12 months. Individual interviews were conducted with 20 selected participants just after the 12-month follow-up. Data were analysed using qualitative content analysis.RESULTS: The postoperative hospital LOS was significantly reduced by a median of six days in the GIHR group compared to the control group, although not significantly reduced in the GIHR group for participants with dementia. Binary logistic regression analyses revealed no significant differences between the GIHR and control groups regarding independent walking ability, the ability to walk without a walking device, or independence in ADL at 3 and 12 months. Gait speed was comparable between the two groups at 3 and 12 months. At 12 months, 56% in the GIHR group and 58% in the control group had recovered their prefracture walking ability, and 41% vs. 42% in GIHR and control groups, respectively, had regained their prefracture Barthel ADL Index score. Interaction analyses showed that the GIHR group vs. the control group had comparable effects on walking ability and ADL at 3 and 12 months, and on falls and mortality between discharge and 12 months, regardless of whether the participants had dementia or not (P≥0.05 for all). The number of readmissions and hospital days after discharge was comparable between GIHR and control groups for participants with dementia. Overall, dementia was associated with significantly impaired walking ability and greater dependence in ADL at 3 and 12 months and with increased risk of falling and increased mortality between discharge and 12 months compared to participants without dementia. The interviews revealed that access to rehabilitation, provided by skilled staff, and support from others were important for participants’ well-being and recovery. Participants experienced a fundamental change in their self-image after the fracture, and faced a number of difficulties, but strove for independence and used adaptive strategies to find contentment in their lives.CONCLUSIONS: In older adults with hip fracture, early discharge followed by interdisciplinary home rehabilitation significantly reduced postoperative hospital LOS. Functional recovery during the year following the fracture was nevertheless comparable to in-hospital geriatric care according to a multifactorial rehabilitation program. The GIHR intervention seems to be appropriate also for older adults with dementia since the effects were not different in this subgroup, except for postoperative hospital LOS, which was not significantly reduced in the GIHR group for participants with dementia. Further studies with larger samples are needed to validate these results. Overall, dementia was associated with a substantial negative impact on the outcomes. According to participants’ experiences, receiving rehabilitation and support after the hip fracture seems crucial for successful recovery. Negative psychological reactions were common, suggesting that future interventions should consider both physical and psychological aspects. Different rehabilitation alternatives were appreciated by the participants. Rehabilitation should thus be customised to suit wishes and needs of older adults and may accordingly be carried out in different settings, where rehabilitation in the home can be one suitable alternative. The findings of this thesis indicate that geriatric interdisciplinary home rehabilitation after hip fracture can be an alternative and a complement to in-hospital care and rehabilitation for older adults with and without dementia.
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2.
  • Sundén, Jenny, Professor, 1973- (författare)
  • Networked Intimacies : Pandemic Dis/Connections Between Anxiety, Joy, and Laughter
  • 2021
  • Ingår i: Disentangling. - Oxford : Oxford University Press. - 9780197571873 - 9780197571880 ; , s. 273-294
  • Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • This chapter zooms in on transformations of intimacy and relational spaces in a time of a viral, global crisis. Set against the backdrop of “social distancing” practices, the chapter opens with a discussion of digital intimacy, focusing on the layering of anxiety and anticipation within networked connectivity. Secondly, it moves on to discuss how such anticipatory anxiety may become punctuated by pleasure and joy. Considering the dynamics between physical disconnection and digital intensity within pandemic hookup practices, it explores in particular instances of quarantine humor in queer hookup cultures. This humor stems from impossibly contradictory spaces of self-isolation, desire, and longing, in relation to which the swiftness of the swipe is transformed into a disconnect in the shape of a delay. The chapter ends with an example of Swedish, queer quarantine humor and a discussion of partial disconnections, or selective connectivity in difficult times in the interest of self-care.
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3.
  • Kempen, Thomas G. H., 1988- (författare)
  • Medication reviews by clinical pharmacists in older hospitalised patients : Implementation, performance and effects
  • 2021
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Background Inappropriate use of medications is a leading cause of avoidable harm in health care. Medication reviews by clinical pharmacists improve medication use, but evidence on hard clinical outcomes in older hospitalised patients is scarce and implementation in practice is challenging. The aim of this thesis was to study the implementation, performance and effects of medication reviews by clinical pharmacists in older hospitalised patients.Methods A case study explored the factors involved in the implementation and sustainability of medication reviews by clinical pharmacists in Region Uppsala, Sweden. A pragmatic multicentre cluster-randomised crossover trial (MedBridge) was conducted to study the effects of hospital-based comprehensive medication reviews (CMRs) including post-discharge follow-ups on older patients’ healthcare utilisation, compared with only hospital-based reviews and usual care. The primary outcome measure was the incidence of unplanned hospital visits within 12 months. A process evaluation was conducted alongside the trial, for which different methods were applied: semi-structured interviews with patients and healthcare professionals, intervention fidelity assessment and process outcomes assessment. A practical tool to identify medication-related hospital admissions, one of the trial’s secondary outcomes, was developed and validated.Results Multiple factors involved in the implementation and sustainability of medication reviews by clinical pharmacists were identified. Examples of facilitating factors were a national focus on quality of care for the elderly and clinical pharmacy education. In total, 2637 participants (median age 81 years) were included in the MedBridge trial. The primary outcome measure did not differ between the treatment groups. Analysis of the interviews with patients and healthcare professionals resulted in seven and six themes, respectively, that were related to the performance of the trial’s interventions. A recurrent theme was the unclear role and responsibilities of the ward-based pharmacist. The intervention fidelity was high during hospital admission and lower surrounding discharge. In 77% of the intervention patients, at least one medication discrepancy or drug-related problem was solved. The developed tool, AT-HARM10, was deemed valid for use by pharmacy students to identify medication-related admissions in older patients.Conclusions This thesis suggests that, despite a high percentage of patients with medication discrepancies or drug-related problems being solved, hospital-based CMRs with and without post-discharge follow-ups, as conducted in the MedBridge trial, do not decrease the incidence of unplanned hospital visits in older patients. Future research and clinical initiatives may benefit from addressing the factors related to the implementation and performance of medication reviews that were identified in this thesis.
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4.
  • Najar, Jenna (författare)
  • Risk factors for dementia. Lifestyle, hormones, neurochemistry, and genetics
  • 2021
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Objective: The aim of this thesis was to expand the understanding about the effects of lifestyle factors, indicators of endogenous estrogens, and genetic factors on the risk of dementia and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) markers for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Method: We used population-based samples from the Gothenburg H70 Birth Cohort Studies (H70-studies), the Prospective Population Study of Women (PPSW), and the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging (MCSA 70+ study). Information on exposures (marital status [married vs not married], cognitive and physical activity [active vs inactive], indicators of endogenous estrogen [age at menarche and menopause, reproductive period, number of pregnancies, and months of breastfeeding], and genetic factors [polygenic risk scores for AD (AD-PRSs), and APOE genotype]) was obtained through interviews and examinations performed by experienced health personnel. Dementia was diagnosed according to established criteria based on information from the examinations. CSF levels of Aβ42, Aβ40, P-tau, and T-tau were measured with immunochemical methods. Results: In Project I (the H70-studies, n=913; the MCSA 70+ study, n=3,471), we found that married men had a reduced risk of dementia compared to unmarried men, while no association was observed in women. In Project II (PPSW and the H70-studies, n=784), we found that midlife cognitive and physical activity were independently associated with reduced risk of late-life dementia disorders. In Project III (PPSW and the H70-studies, n=1,364), we found that longer reproductive period and later age at menopause were associated with increased risk of dementia and AD. In Project IV (PPSW and the H70-studies, n=75), we found that longer reproductive period was associated with CSF biomarkers for AD (lower levels of Aβ42, lower ratio of Aβ42/Aβ40, and higher levels of P-tau). In Project V (the H70-studies, n=2,052), we found that AD-PRSs (including 39 and 57 genetic variants) and APOE genotype were associated with risk of dementia up to very old ages. Conclusion: The results from this thesis add knowledge about risk factors for dementia, and add further knowledge on the protective effects of cognitive and physical activity on different dementia disorders.
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5.
  • Burman, Maria, 1983- (författare)
  • Malnutrition and obesity among older adults, assessed by Mini Nutritional Assessment and the body mass index, respectively : prevalence and associations with mortality and urinary tract infection
  • 2021
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • INTRODUCTION: Malnutrition and obesity are health concerns among older (aged ≥ 65 years) adults, but the combination of them have not been studied thoroughly nor have they been thoroughly investigated in very old (aged ≥ 85 years) adults. The aims of this thesis were to investigate the prevalence, trends in prevalence and associations with mortality of malnutrition and obesity, assessed by Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA) and the body mass index (BMI), respectively, and to examine the combined effects of these conditions on mortality. Malnutrition as a risk factor for urinary tract infection (UTI) was also investigated. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The studies reported on in papers I and II were conducted with data from the Umeå85+/Gerontological Regional Database study, a population-based study of cohorts of very old adults. Data from all four Swedish cohorts (2000–2002, 2005–2007, 2010–2012 and 2015–2017), and from the 2000–2002 and 2005–2007 Swedish cohorts and a 2005–2006 Finnish cohort, respectively, were used. In the paper I study, trends in the prevalence of malnutrition (by MNA score) and obesity (by BMI) were investigated across cohorts. In the paper II study, the associations of MNA scores and BMI with 5-year mortality were investigated. The study reported on in paper III was conducted with data from the Senior Alert national quality registry; associations of Mini Nutritional Assessment–Short Form (MNA-SF) scores, BMI and 2-year mortality in older adults living in residential care facilities in Sweden were investigated. The study reported on in paper IV was conducted with data from the Frail Older People–Activity and Nutrition and Umeå Dementia and Exercise studies; risk factors for UTI among older adults in residential care facilities were investigated. RESULTS: In the paper I study, mean BMI increased between 2000–2002 and 2015–2017 and the prevalence of obesity were 13.4% and 18.3%, respectively; the prevalences of underweight were 7.6% and 3.0%, respectively. Mean MNA scores increased between 2000–2002 and 2010–2012 and were slightly lower in 2015–2017. The prevalence of malnutrition according to MNA scores in the four cohorts were 12.2%, 6.4%, 5.1% and 8.7%, respectively, and the prevalence of at risk thereof were 31.8%–37.2%. In the paper II study, 13.3% of participants were malnourished, and 40.3% at risk thereof according to MNA scores, and malnutrition was more common among women than men. Twenty-five percent of the population had BMIs ≥28.0 kg/m2. Of those with malnutrition according to MNA scores, 17.4% had BMIs ≥ 24.7 kg/m2; of those with good nutritional status according to MNA scores, 13.8% had BMIs < 22.2 kg/m2. Compared to malnutrition according to MNA, lesser mortality was found in individuals with good nutritional status. Compared to individuals with BMI <22.2 kg/m2, lesser mortality was found in those with BMI ≥28.0 kg/m2. In the paper III study, 14.6% of the population was malnourished, and 45.0% at risk of malnutrition according to MNA-SF scores and 16.0% were obese. Compared to individuals with good nutritional status, greater mortality was found in those with malnutrition according to MNA-SF. Mortality was greater among underweight than among normal-weight participants and lesser among participants with obesity, including severe obesity. Higher BMIs were also associated with reduced mortality in subgroups defined by MNA-SF scores. In the paper IV study, malnutrition according to MNA scores was not a risk factor for UTI in the whole sample or in women. In men, the MNA score was associated with UTI in univariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this thesis highlight the importance of nutritional screening in older adults in residential care facilities and in very old adults, since malnutrition risk was common and associated with greater mortality among these populations. Malnutrition according to MNA was not a clear risk factor for UTI in older adults living in residential care facilities. Time trends indicated an increasing prevalence of obesity whereas no change in nutritional status according to MNA was observed among very old adults, although these trends need further investigation. The results also confirmed that higher BMIs were beneficial for survival in these populations, and in the residential care population this seems to apply also for BMIs reflecting severe obesity. Finally, in the residential care population, regardless of nutritional status according to MNA-SF, higher BMIs were associated with better survival.
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6.
  • Åhman, Hanna Bozkurt, 1981- (författare)
  • Timed Up-and-Go Dual-Task Tests for Early Detection of Dementia Disorder
  • 2021
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Dementia constitutes an important and growing public health concern. There is a need for new, simple, and inexpensive methods to detect dementia disorders early in the disease progression. For this purpose, dual-tasking, i.e., simultaneous performance of two tasks, has been proposed.The overall aim of this thesis was to explore if Timed Up-and-Go (TUG) dual-task (TUGdt) tests can be used for early detection of dementia disorder. Cross-sectional and longitudinal designs were used. Participants were recruited when undergoing memory assessment at memory clinics (patients) and through advertisements (controls). The TUGdt tests involved TUG combined with the cognitive tasks a) naming animals (TUGdt NA) and b) reciting months in reverse order (TUGdt MB). The tests were video recorded. Test outcomes were calculated using time scores and/or verbal performances. Additionally, the data collection comprised clinical tests and medical record reviews. Paper I included 90 patients who had carried out lumbar puncture as part of the memory assessment. By Spearman’s rank correlation, the TUGdt NA test outcomes “number of animals” and “animals/10 s” correlated negatively to the cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers t-tau and p-tau, suggesting that neurodegeneration is associated with dual-task performance. In Paper II, 298 patients and 166 controls participated. Logistic regression models showed that “animals/10 s” and “months/10 s” discriminated significantly between dementia, mild cognitive impairment (MCI), subjective cognitive impairment (SCI), and controls. Thus, TUGdt testing could be useful in diagnostic assessments. Paper III involved 172 patients, initially diagnosed with MCI or SCI, for whom diagnostic information was available after 2.5 years. Logistic regression showed inverse associations between “animals/10 s” and dementia incidence, particularly for patients <72 years (median age). For these younger patients, the predictive capacity of “animals/10 s” was excellent. Hence, TUGdt NA has potential for predicting dementia from SCI or MCI, particularly among younger patients. Paper IV included 166 controls for presenting TUGdt reference values in age- and sex-specific groups, and 43 controls for test-retest reliability. Reference values were calculated with quantile regression and may be useful in clinic and research. Intra-class correlation coefficients showed excellent reliability for time scores, while the other test outcomes were poor to good. “Animals/10 s” showed fair to good reliability despite being a ratio of other variables, which negatively affects reliability. In summary, TUGdt NA has the potential to be used for early detection of dementia disorder, and the test outcome “animals/10 s” merits further evaluation.
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  • Fauth, Elizabeth Braungart, et al. (författare)
  • DISCREPANCIES IN OBJECTIVE AND SUBJECTIVE FINE MOTOR ABILITIES IN OCTOGENARIANS
  • 2021
  • Ingår i: Innovation in Aging. - : Oxford University Press. - 2399-5300. ; 5:Supplement 1, s. 839-840
  • Tidskriftsartikel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Older individuals may have discrepancies between self-reported and performance-based abilities on activities of daily living (ADL). We examined objective and self-reported fine motor abilities (FMA). FMA are required for many ADLs, but are examined less frequently than gross-motor tasks in this population. We used two waves of the population-based OCTO-Twin study including mono-/dizygotic Swedish twins, aged 80+. One twin was randomly selected for analyses (baseline N=262; wave 2 N=198; Meanage =83.27; SDage=2.90; 66.4% female). Participants self-reported their ability to manipulate things with hands (cannot do, some problem, no problem) and completed a timed FMA assessment including five everyday tasks (e.g. inserting a key in a lock). Slow performance was coded as 1+ SD from the mean (=80+ seconds). At baseline, 65.8% of slow performers reported ‘no problems’ with hand manipulation. Over two waves (two years), a two-factor ANOVA (including slowness-by-perception interaction) supported a significant difference in total motor task performance between slow performers reporting ‘no problems’ and fast performers reporting ‘no problems’, for both rate of change (diff = -26 seconds, p<.0001) and wave 2 level (diff = 50 seconds, p < .0001). 82% of slow performers at wave 2 reported ‘no problems’, which is surprising given that they had become even slower over the past two years. Findings suggest that objective FMA measures are needed, as self-report is inaccurate and not prognostic. Future work will examine if discrepancies in performance/perceived FMA predict poorer outcomes, and/or if reporting ‘no problems’ despite slower performance is protective against cognitive adaptation to slowing.
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