A Care Model for Elderly Hip-fractured Persons With Cognitive Impairment and Their Family Caregivers
Hip Fractures, Cognitive Impairment
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Hip Fractures focused on measuring older persons, family-centered care model, family caregiver's competence, intervention protocol
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Subjects are:
- age 60 years or older,
- admitted to CGMH due to one-side hip fracture, and being diagnosed as needing surgery,
- assessed as having cognitive impairment by the Chinese Mini-Mental State Examination (CMMSE) (CMMSE score < 21 with < 6 years education, or CMMSE < 25 with ≥ 6 years education; Yip et al., 1992),
- having a primary family caregiver,
- living in northern Taiwan (i.e., greater Taipei area, Keelung, Taoyuan, or Shin-Ju province).
Family caregivers:
- age 20 years or older,
- responsible for providing direct care to or supervising care received by the patient.
Exclusion Criteria:
Subjects are
- cognitively intact by CMMSE,
- without a primary family caregiver,
- terminally ill,
- severe cognitive impairment such that they are completely unable to follow orders (CMMSE < 10; Yip et al., 1992).
Sites / Locations
- Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
The family-centered care model
Usual care
Interventions include a family-centered approach to interdisciplinary care and a family caregiving-training component to enhance family caregivers' competence in providing post-operative care and handling behavioral problems of adults with cognitive impairment. The interdisciplinary care model consists of geriatric consultation, continuous rehabilitation, and discharge planning. The family-centered approach involves family caregivers using a structured guide to assess the condition of the hip-fractured patient with cognitive impairment. Habits, daily routines, preferences, behavioral problems and environmental safety and stimuli are explored. The strengths, weakness, and resources of the family are assessed. The behavioral problems and symptoms to target are identified. Both the research nurse and the caregiver will then collaborate on a tentative plan to minimize the behavioral problems.
During hospitalization, patients receive health teaching for exercise while still in bed. Physical therapy usually starts only for those who received arthroplasty of hip replacement. Physical therapists train patients to use a walker and get in/out of bed through consultation. Usually, patients are discharged from the hospital without home assessment, nor are in-home programs provided for rehabilitation or nursing care. The usual care does not involve interdisciplinary care protocols, continuity of care, or specific care for hip-fractured patients with cognitive impairment.