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Multicomponent Intervention and Long‐Term Disability in Older Adults: A Nonrandomized Prospective Study
Author(s) -
Park Chan Mi,
Oh Gahee,
Lee Heayon,
Jung HeeWon,
Lee Eunju,
Jang IlYoung,
Kim Dae Hyun
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of the american geriatrics society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.992
H-Index - 232
eISSN - 1532-5415
pISSN - 0002-8614
DOI - 10.1111/jgs.16926
Subject(s) - medicine , inverse probability weighting , confounding , poisson regression , hazard ratio , prospective cohort study , population , proportional hazards model , gerontology , randomized controlled trial , physical therapy , demography , confidence interval , propensity score matching , environmental health , sociology
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES To evaluate the long‐term association between a multicomponent intervention program and disability in socioeconomically vulnerable older adults. DESIGN This was a nonrandomized prospective intervention trial. SETTING The setting was a community. PARTICIPANTS Participants included older Koreans living alone or receiving government assistance from a low‐income program. INTERVENTION The intervention was a 24‐week multicomponent program compromising group exercise, nutritional supplementation, management of depression, deprescribing, and home hazard reduction (n = 187) versus usual care (n = 196). MEASUREMENTS The number of dependencies in 17 basic and instrumental activities of daily living was measured every 3 months for 30 months (range: 0–17; greater values indicated worse disability). Inverse probability weighting Poisson regression was used to model the number of dependencies to adjust for confounding bias and higher dropout rates of those with greater disability. RESULTS The study population had a mean age of 76 years, and 26% were men. During the 30‐month follow up, 17 died (n = 8, intervention; n = 9, control), 62 (n = 16, intervention; n = 46, control) were institutionalized or received nursing home care, and 34 (n = 15, intervention; n = 19, control) were lost to follow up. After inverse probability weighting, the mean number of dependencies at baseline was 1.21 and 1.29 for the intervention group and the control group, respectively ( P = .80). The intervention group had fewer dependencies than the control group, but the difference was attenuated over time: 1.08 versus 1.60 at 6 months ( P = .04), 1.29 versus 1.87 at 12 months ( P = .03), 1.62 versus 2.17 at 18 months ( P = .06), 2.08 versus 2.51 at 24 months ( P = .18), and 2.73 versus 2.90 at 30 months ( P = .67). CONCLUSION A 24‐week multicomponent intervention was associated with a slower progression of disability; however, the diminishing association from 24 months and beyond suggests that reassessment and intervention may be necessary. Due to a lack of randomization, our findings should be interpreted with caution.

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