Promoting Seniors' Health With Home Care Aides
Status: | Recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | Neurology |
Therapuetic Areas: | Neurology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 60 - 110 |
Updated: | 10/20/2018 |
Start Date: | September 1, 2017 |
End Date: | April 30, 2021 |
Contact: | Naoko Muramatsu, PhD |
Email: | naoko@uic.edu |
Phone: | 312-413-0485 |
Promoting Seniors' Health With Home Care Aides: A Randomized Controlled Trial
This study aims to test whether a safe physical activity program with a built-in motivational
enhancement component, performed in a seated position, preserves the function and well-being
of older home care clients.
enhancement component, performed in a seated position, preserves the function and well-being
of older home care clients.
Regular physical activity benefits older adults physically and mentally. However, the
availability and the evidence for physical activity programs that are safe and appropriate
for home-bound older adults at risk for nursing home admission are limited. The current
project aims to examine the effectiveness of a safe physical activity program, led by home
care aides who regularly help hard-to-reach older home care clients with housekeeping and
routine personal care services in the home. The primary aim is to test whether the safe
physical activity program with a built-in motivational enhancement component, performed in a
seated position, preserves the function and well-being of home care clients. The secondary
aim is to understand for whom the program is efficacious, the extent to which the program can
reach the target population, the extent to which participants drop out of the program, the
extent to which program participants maintain the behavioral change introduced by the
intervention, and what the program's cost-effectiveness is. Building on a pilot project that
demonstrated the program's feasibility in a large home care program funded by the state and
Medicaid, this randomized controlled trial will inform future expansion of the physical
activity program into real-world home care settings.
availability and the evidence for physical activity programs that are safe and appropriate
for home-bound older adults at risk for nursing home admission are limited. The current
project aims to examine the effectiveness of a safe physical activity program, led by home
care aides who regularly help hard-to-reach older home care clients with housekeeping and
routine personal care services in the home. The primary aim is to test whether the safe
physical activity program with a built-in motivational enhancement component, performed in a
seated position, preserves the function and well-being of home care clients. The secondary
aim is to understand for whom the program is efficacious, the extent to which the program can
reach the target population, the extent to which participants drop out of the program, the
extent to which program participants maintain the behavioral change introduced by the
intervention, and what the program's cost-effectiveness is. Building on a pilot project that
demonstrated the program's feasibility in a large home care program funded by the state and
Medicaid, this randomized controlled trial will inform future expansion of the physical
activity program into real-world home care settings.
HOME CARE CLIENTS
Inclusion Criteria:
- English or Spanish-speaking older adults aged 60+
- Receiving Illinois Department on Aging Community Care Program In-Home service from the
collaborating home care agency
- Able to sit in a chair independently for >=15 minutes (it is fine if the person needs
help with transferring to a chair)
- Cognitive status sufficient to follow directions and respond to survey questions as
determined by the Six-Item Screener (Callahan, et al., 2002) (the instrument used in
the phone screening) and the Modified Mini-Mental State (3MS) Examination (the
instrument used in the in-home screening)
- Willing to be assigned to either intervention program
- Willing to have the research team notify the primary care physician of the client's
study participation
Exclusion Criteria:
- Having a legal guardian appointed
- Bedridden or unable to sit in a chair independently
- Receiving hospice care or having a terminal diagnosis
- Self-reported inability to read large print books
HOME CARE AIDES
Inclusion Criteria:
- English or Spanish-speaking home care aide caring for an older home care client
eligible for the study
- Age 18 and older
- Willing to implement the intervention program routine with their eligible client(s)
for the full 4 months
- Willing to be randomly assigned to either intervention program
- Intend to be a home care aide for the next 12 months
Exclusion Criteria
• Not having a home care client who participates in the study
We found this trial at
1
site
2035 W Taylor St
Chicago, Illinois
Chicago, Illinois
(312) 996-4350
Principal Investigator: Naoko Muramatsu, PhD
Phone: 312-996-6698
University of Illinois at Chicago A major research university in the heart of one of...
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