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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of the American Geriatrics Society >Going it together: persistence of older adults' accompaniment to physician visits by a family companion.
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Going it together: persistence of older adults' accompaniment to physician visits by a family companion.

机译:齐心协力:老年人陪伴家人陪同看医生。

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摘要

OBJECTIVES: Although older adults are often accompanied to routine physician visits and commonly receive disability-related task assistance, the overlap and persistence of this help is not well understood. This study investigates whether older adults who are accompanied to routine physician visits (1) also receive task assistance and (2) continue to be accompanied at 12-months by the same family companion. DESIGN: Observational study. SETTING: Nationally representative survey. PARTICIPANTS: Community-dwelling adults aged 65 and older who responded to the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey (MCBS) in 2006 (n = 11,582) and a subset (n = 7,510) who responded in 2005 and 2006. MEASUREMENTS: Accompaniment to physician visits by a family companion and receipt of task assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs) or instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs). Persistent accompaniment and consistent family companion involvement was ascertained from 2005 and 2006 survey responses. RESULTS: Among community-dwelling older adults, 18.6% were accompanied to physician visits only, and 12.7% were accompanied to physician visits and received task assistance. Accompanied older adults who received task assistance were older, less educated, and had worse self-rated health than their counterparts who were accompanied only. Family companions who provided task assistance (vs those who did not) were more actively engaged in physician visit processes and more often identified as always present. Three-fourths (74.5%) of accompanied older adults were persistently accompanied to physician visits at 12 months, nearly always (87.9%) by the same family companion. Receipt of task assistance was strongly associated with persistent accompaniment (aOR = 2.52; 95% CI: 1.93-3.29). CONCLUSIONS: Older adults' accompaniment to physician visits typically persists, most often by consistently involved family companions. Findings have implications for the patient-physician partnership and the patient-centered medical home.
机译:目的:尽管老年人通常会陪同常规的医生就诊,并且通常会获得与残疾相关的任务帮助,但这种帮助的重叠和持久性仍未得到很好的理解。这项研究调查了在常规医师就诊的陪同下的老年人(1)是否也获得任务协助,以及(2)在12个月内是否继续由同一个家庭伴侣陪同。设计:观察性研究。地点:全国代表性调查。参与者:2006年对Medicare当前受益人调查(MCBS)做出回应的65岁及65岁以上社区居民成年人(n = 11,582),以及在2005年和2006年做出了回应的一部分(n = 7,510)。测量:陪同医生就诊家人陪同并获得任务协助以及日常生活活动(ADL)或日常生活工具活动(IADL)。从2005年和2006年的调查答复中确定了持续的陪伴和家人同伴的持续参与。结果:在社区居住的老年人中,只有18.6%的人陪同医师就诊,有12.7%的人陪同医师就诊并获得了任务帮助。与仅陪伴的同龄人相比,接受任务协助的陪同的老年人年龄更大,教育程度较低,并且自我评估的健康状况较差。提供任务帮助(相对于那些没有提供帮助)的家庭同伴更积极地参与医生的就诊过程,并且经常被确定为始终存在。四分之三(74.5%)的伴随成年人在12个月时一直陪同医生就诊,几乎总是(87.9%)由同一个家庭伴侣陪伴。接受任务协助与持续伴奏密切相关(aOR = 2.52; 95%CI:1.93-3.29)。结论:老年人对医生就诊的陪伴通常持续存在,大多数情况下是由长期参与的家庭同伴陪伴。研究结果对患者与医师的合作关系以及以患者为中心的医疗之家具有重要意义。

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