Lack of compliance of staff in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care among old (65+ yrs) Danish nursing home residents

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Standard

Lack of compliance of staff in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care among old (65+ yrs) Danish nursing home residents. / Beck, Anne Marie; Damkjær, Karin; Tetens, Inge.

I: Aging Clinical and Experimental Research (Online), Bind 21, Nr. 2, 2009, s. 143-149.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Beck, AM, Damkjær, K & Tetens, I 2009, 'Lack of compliance of staff in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care among old (65+ yrs) Danish nursing home residents', Aging Clinical and Experimental Research (Online), bind 21, nr. 2, s. 143-149.

APA

Beck, A. M., Damkjær, K., & Tetens, I. (2009). Lack of compliance of staff in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care among old (65+ yrs) Danish nursing home residents. Aging Clinical and Experimental Research (Online), 21(2), 143-149.

Vancouver

Beck AM, Damkjær K, Tetens I. Lack of compliance of staff in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care among old (65+ yrs) Danish nursing home residents. Aging Clinical and Experimental Research (Online). 2009;21(2):143-149.

Author

Beck, Anne Marie ; Damkjær, Karin ; Tetens, Inge. / Lack of compliance of staff in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care among old (65+ yrs) Danish nursing home residents. I: Aging Clinical and Experimental Research (Online). 2009 ; Bind 21, Nr. 2. s. 143-149.

Bibtex

@article{3ac1a87e851244f2a4907f18a2804ac0,
title = "Lack of compliance of staff in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care among old (65+ yrs) Danish nursing home residents",
abstract = "BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Lack of compliance on the part of old participants has been reported in several randomised nutritional intervention studies. However, lack of compliance by staff may also have a significant impact on the effect of interventions. The aim of this paper is to test the hypothesis that, in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care in old nursing home residents, lack of compliance by staff rather than residents is the major problem.METHODS: An eleven week randomized, controlled trial in seven nursing homes, with nutrition, exercise and oral care strategies, and 62 residents in the intervention group. Staff and researchers documented compliance of residents with the various strategies, including notes about problems.RESULTS: The nutrition and exercise strategies were well accepted by participating residents. The main reason for non-compliance may be related to staff problems. Up to one-sixth of the planned nutrition interventions were not documented as having been given to the residents.CONCLUSIONS: Lack of compliance by staff rather than residents seemed to be the main problem. In order to improve compliance in future studies, more focus should be put on the effect of practical implementation on staff. Insight into these matters may give valuable information to counteract staff problems, facilitate implementation in long term, and hence improve the benefits of nutrition interventions.",
keywords = "Aged, 80 and over, Exercise, Female, Geriatric Nursing, Guideline Adherence, Humans, Male, Malnutrition, Nursing Homes, Nursing Staff, Nutrition Therapy, Oral Hygiene, Patient Compliance, Program Evaluation, Workload, Randomized Controlled Trial",
author = "Beck, {Anne Marie} and Karin Damkj{\ae}r and Inge Tetens",
year = "2009",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "143--149",
journal = "Aging Clinical and Experimental Research (Online)",
issn = "1720-8319",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Lack of compliance of staff in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care among old (65+ yrs) Danish nursing home residents

AU - Beck, Anne Marie

AU - Damkjær, Karin

AU - Tetens, Inge

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Lack of compliance on the part of old participants has been reported in several randomised nutritional intervention studies. However, lack of compliance by staff may also have a significant impact on the effect of interventions. The aim of this paper is to test the hypothesis that, in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care in old nursing home residents, lack of compliance by staff rather than residents is the major problem.METHODS: An eleven week randomized, controlled trial in seven nursing homes, with nutrition, exercise and oral care strategies, and 62 residents in the intervention group. Staff and researchers documented compliance of residents with the various strategies, including notes about problems.RESULTS: The nutrition and exercise strategies were well accepted by participating residents. The main reason for non-compliance may be related to staff problems. Up to one-sixth of the planned nutrition interventions were not documented as having been given to the residents.CONCLUSIONS: Lack of compliance by staff rather than residents seemed to be the main problem. In order to improve compliance in future studies, more focus should be put on the effect of practical implementation on staff. Insight into these matters may give valuable information to counteract staff problems, facilitate implementation in long term, and hence improve the benefits of nutrition interventions.

AB - BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Lack of compliance on the part of old participants has been reported in several randomised nutritional intervention studies. However, lack of compliance by staff may also have a significant impact on the effect of interventions. The aim of this paper is to test the hypothesis that, in an intervention study with focus on nutrition, exercise and oral care in old nursing home residents, lack of compliance by staff rather than residents is the major problem.METHODS: An eleven week randomized, controlled trial in seven nursing homes, with nutrition, exercise and oral care strategies, and 62 residents in the intervention group. Staff and researchers documented compliance of residents with the various strategies, including notes about problems.RESULTS: The nutrition and exercise strategies were well accepted by participating residents. The main reason for non-compliance may be related to staff problems. Up to one-sixth of the planned nutrition interventions were not documented as having been given to the residents.CONCLUSIONS: Lack of compliance by staff rather than residents seemed to be the main problem. In order to improve compliance in future studies, more focus should be put on the effect of practical implementation on staff. Insight into these matters may give valuable information to counteract staff problems, facilitate implementation in long term, and hence improve the benefits of nutrition interventions.

KW - Aged, 80 and over

KW - Exercise

KW - Female

KW - Geriatric Nursing

KW - Guideline Adherence

KW - Humans

KW - Male

KW - Malnutrition

KW - Nursing Homes

KW - Nursing Staff

KW - Nutrition Therapy

KW - Oral Hygiene

KW - Patient Compliance

KW - Program Evaluation

KW - Workload

KW - Randomized Controlled Trial

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 19448386

VL - 21

SP - 143

EP - 149

JO - Aging Clinical and Experimental Research (Online)

JF - Aging Clinical and Experimental Research (Online)

SN - 1720-8319

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 184388177