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Restraint Use in Older Adults Receiving Home Care.

OBJECTIVES: To determine the prevalence, types, frequency, and duration of restraint use in older adults receiving home nursing care and to determine factors involved in the decision-making process for restraint use and application.

DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey of restraint use in older adults receiving home care completed by primary care nurses.

SETTING: Homes of older adults receiving care from a home nursing organization in Belgium.

PARTICIPANTS: Randomized sample of older adults receiving home care (N = 6,397; mean age 80.6; 66.8% female).

MEASUREMENTS: For each participant, nurses completed an investigator-constructed and -validated questionnaire collecting information demographic, clinical, and behavioral characteristics and aspects of restraint use. A broad definition of restraint was used that includes a range of restrictive actions.

RESULTS: Restraints were used in 24.7% of the participants, mostly on a daily basis (85%) and often for a long period (54.5%, 24 h/d). The most common reason for restraint use was safety (50.2%). Other reasons were that the individual wanted to remain at home longer, which necessitated the use of restraints (18.2%) and to provide respite for the informal caregiver (8.6%). The latter played an important role in the decision and application process. The physician was less involved in the process. In 64.5% of cases, there was no evaluation after restraint use was initiated.

CONCLUSION: Use of restraints is common in older adults receiving home care nursing in Belgium. These results contribute to a better understanding of the complexity of use of restraints in home care, a situation that may be even more complex than in nursing homes and acute hospital settings.

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