Older Adults Receiving Rehabilitation Services Are More Likely to Get Bathing and Toileting Equipment Installed

Adaptive equipment, such as shower grab bars and modified toilet seating, is effective but underused in the United States. To change this, a better understanding of how equipment ends up being installed is needed. We hypothesized that rehabilitation services were a major mechanism. To examine the as...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of occupational therapy 2023-01, Vol.77 (1)
Hauptverfasser: Simning, Adam, Caprio, Thomas V, Lam, Kenneth
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Caprio, Thomas V
Lam, Kenneth
description Adaptive equipment, such as shower grab bars and modified toilet seating, is effective but underused in the United States. To change this, a better understanding of how equipment ends up being installed is needed. We hypothesized that rehabilitation services were a major mechanism. To examine the association between receipt of rehabilitation services and installation of adaptive equipment. Observational cohort of the National Health and Aging Trends Study in 2015 and 2016. Community. A total of 416 community-dwelling adults age 65 yr or older who needed bathing equipment and 454 who needed toileting equipment. Study outcomes were the installation of bathing or toileting equipment. The primary independent variable was the receipt of rehabilitation services between 2015 and 2016. Among older adults who needed equipment in 2015, 34.3% had bathing equipment and 19.2% had toileting equipment installed by 2016. In multivariate logistic regression analyses, rehabilitation services were associated with installation of bathing (odds ratio [OR] = 5.07, 95% confidence interval [CI] [2.60, 9.89]) and toileting equipment (OR = 2.67, 95% CI [1.48, 4.84]). A minority of those in need have adaptive equipment installed within a year. In the current health care system, rehabilitation providers play a major role in equipment installation. What This Article Adds: Rehabilitation providers are involved in the installation of adaptive bathroom equipment among older persons who need it. Still, most in need of equipment do not have it after a year, suggesting that further work is needed to increase access to rehabilitation providers and develop other avenues for obtaining equipment.
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subjects ADLs
Aged
Aged patients
Aged, 80 and over
Balance Deficits and Fall Risks
Baths
Care and treatment
Columns: Brief Report
Environmental Factors
Habilitation and Rehabilitation
Home Modification Practice
Humans
Hygiene
Independent Living
Influence
Management
Medicare
Medicare Advantage
Older Adults
Policy Issues
Policymaker
Population
Rehabilitation
Self Care
Self-Help Devices
Self-help devices for the disabled
United States
title Older Adults Receiving Rehabilitation Services Are More Likely to Get Bathing and Toileting Equipment Installed
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