Improving Prediction of Risk of Admission to Long-Term Care or Mortality Among Home Care Users With IDD

TitleImproving Prediction of Risk of Admission to Long-Term Care or Mortality Among Home Care Users With IDD
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsOuellette-Kuntz H., Stankiewicz E., McIsaac M., Martin L.
JournalCanadian Geriatrics Journal
Volume21
Issue4
Pagination303-306
Date PublishedDec
ISBN Number1925-8348
Accession NumberWOS:000452800700004
Keywordsadults, aging, developmental disability, developmental-disabilities, Frailty, home care, institutionalization, intellectual disabilities, Intellectual disability, Life Expectancy, Long-Term Care, mortality, people, rates, urban
Abstract

BackgroundFrailty is an established predictor of admission into long-term care (LTC) and mortality in the elderly population. Assessment of frailty among adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) using a generic frailty marker may not be as predictive, as some lifelong disabilities associated with IDD may be interpreted as a sign of frailty. This study set out to determine if adding the Home Care-Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Frailty Index (HC-IDD Frailty Index), developed for use in home care users with IDD, to a basic list of predictors (age, sex, rural status, and the Johns Hopkins Frailty Marker) increases the ability to predict admission to long-term care or death within one year.MethodsA retrospective cohort study was conducted using Residential Assessment Instrument for Home Care (RAI-HC) data for adult home care users with IDD who had a home care assessment between January 1, 2010 and December 31, 2013 (N = 6,169).ResultsThe HC-IDD Frailty Index was found to significantly improve prediction of transitions into LTC or death by explaining an additional 5.95% of the variance in such transitions among home care users with IDD (p value <.0001).ConclusionsWe recommend the use of the HC-IDD Frailty Index in care planning and in further research related to the effectiveness of interventions to reduce or delay adverse age-related outcomes among adults with IDD.

DOI10.5770/cgj.21.319
Alternate JournalCan Geriatr J