Feasibility of a Novel Lighting System to Reduce Nighttime Falls in Assisted Living Residents With Dementia

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q2 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
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Abstract

Objectives

To determine the feasibility of conducting a trial of a novel nighttime lighting system designed to support postural stability in assisted living (AL) residents, and to estimate intervention effectiveness by comparing the incidence of nighttime falls during the novel lighting condition to that in a control condition featuring a standard nightlight.

Design

Randomized crossover trial. The intervention consisted of 3 custom-designed linear arrays of amber light-emitting diodes (LEDs) arranged in strips: 1 strip aligned horizontally across the top of the bathroom/entry doorframe containing 68 LEDs and 2 strips of 140 LEDs each aligned vertically down the sides of the doorframe. The control condition was 1 standard nightlight in the bedroom and 1 in the bathroom. Residents were randomized to treatment sequences, receiving each condition for 1-2 quarters.

Setting and Participants

Five AL communities serving exclusively residents with dementia or having separate units for residents with dementia, with at least 30 beds and at least 5 residents in private rooms. Residents were eligible if they had dementia, were ambulatory, did not share a bedroom, were not on hospice or expected to die within the year, and were not expected to transfer to another setting within the year.

Methods

Outcomes included recruitment, retention, incident falls, and satisfaction.

Results

Thirty-eight residents of the 5 communities participated (56% recruitment rate), and 24 family members completed surveys about their satisfaction with the lighting system. Cameras captured falls data for 92% of 8591 resident nights. The incidence density for falls was 34% lower in the intervention condition than the control condition (incidence density ratio 0.66, 95% CI 0.35, 1.22), which did not reach statistical significance (P = .18).

Conclusions and Implications

This low-cost intervention was feasible with high satisfaction. Building on these results, the intervention is being evaluated in a larger clinical trial. A novel lighting system to reduce falls could ultimately benefit millions of older adults across all settings.

新型照明系统减少老年痴呆症辅助生活设施居民夜间跌倒的可行性。
研究目的确定对旨在帮助生活辅助设施(AL)居民保持姿势稳定的新型夜间照明系统进行试验的可行性,并通过比较新型照明条件下与采用标准夜灯的对照条件下的夜间跌倒发生率来估计干预效果:设计:随机交叉试验。干预措施由3个定制设计的琥珀色发光二极管(LED)线性阵列组成:1 条横向排列在浴室/玄关门框顶部,包含 68 个 LED;2 条纵向排列在门框两侧,各包含 140 个 LED。对照条件是在卧室和浴室各安装一盏标准夜灯。居民被随机分配到治疗序列中,每种条件接受1-2个季度的治疗:五个专门为患有痴呆症的居民提供服务或为患有痴呆症的居民提供独立单元的 AL 社区,这些社区至少有 30 张床位,至少有 5 名居民住在单间里。如果居民患有痴呆症、行动自如、不共用一间卧室、未接受临终关怀或预计在一年内死亡,且预计在一年内不会转到其他环境,则符合条件:结果:5 个社区的 38 名居民在一年内接受了安宁疗护,或预计在一年内死亡,且预计在一年内不会转到其他环境:5个社区的38名居民参加了调查(招募率为56%),24名家庭成员完成了照明系统满意度调查。摄像头采集了 8591 个居民夜晚中 92% 的跌倒数据。干预条件下的跌倒发生密度比对照条件下低 34%(发生密度比 0.66,95% CI 0.35,1.22),但未达到统计学意义(P = .18):这种低成本的干预措施是可行的,满意度也很高。基于这些结果,该干预措施正在一项更大规模的临床试验中进行评估。这种减少跌倒的新型照明系统最终将惠及所有环境中的数百万老年人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
11.10
自引率
6.60%
发文量
472
审稿时长
44 days
期刊介绍: JAMDA, the official journal of AMDA - The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine, is a leading peer-reviewed publication that offers practical information and research geared towards healthcare professionals in the post-acute and long-term care fields. It is also a valuable resource for policy-makers, organizational leaders, educators, and advocates. The journal provides essential information for various healthcare professionals such as medical directors, attending physicians, nurses, consultant pharmacists, geriatric psychiatrists, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, physical and occupational therapists, social workers, and others involved in providing, overseeing, and promoting quality
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