Fixing up seniors’ homes to help
them age in place
Monday,
July 8, 2013
Alberta
Hough struggles to feed herself a snack, her arms shaking badly from
Parkinson's disease. Days earlier, the 84-year-old fell while eating, sliding
off her kitchen chair.
The
rest of Hough's day isn't much easier to navigate. She wobbles into a bathtub
with no grab bar. Her feet catch on damaged floor tiles. Part of the banister
she needs to steady herself on the stairs has pulled out of the wall. At the
back door, a rickety wooden ramp no longer supports the scooter that helps her
get around.
The
environment in which you live can be as disabling as a disease, and too often,
older Americans wind up in a nursing home not because they're super-sick but
because they can't get through their days safely at home.
Now
a major research project will bring handymen, occupational therapists and
nurses into the homes of 800 low-income seniors in Baltimore to test if some
inexpensive fix-ups and strategies for daily living can keep them independent
longer, and save millions in taxpayer dollars spent on nursing home care.
"Very
small changes can make a big difference," said Sarah Szanton, a Johns
Hopkins University associate nursing professor who leads the project.
"We're not saying, `What's your blood pressure?' We're focusing on
function: What do they want to do?"
Losing
independence is a leading fear as people age. But a recent poll shows that too
few comprehend the changes in lifestyle needed to offset the chronic illnesses
and gradual slowdown that hit just about everyone in the 70s, 80s and beyond.
Asked
about their choice of living situation when they're older, Americans 40 and
over say their top priorities are a one-level home with no stairs, that's close
to their children and medical care, according to the poll by the AP-NORC Center
for Public Affairs Research.
Chances
are, that won't be enough.
For
Hough, No. 1 is feeding herself without everything tumbling off the fork.
"I'm
shaking all the time," she quietly told Hopkins occupational therapist
Allyson Evelyn-Gustave.
Hough's
other priority is not falling, and stairs are only one of her home's hazards.
To
Hopkins' Szanton, bridging the gap between what older adults are able to do and
what their homes allow them to do is key to maintaining independence.
The
Capable study aims to prove how. During 10 home visits over four months, the
Hopkins team is tailoring interventions _ including about $1,100 in home
repairs or modifications provided for free _ to help low-income seniors who are
having trouble caring for themselves.
Drills
buzzed in Hough's house as carpenters installed a new banister and added grab
bars and a raised toilet seat in the bathroom. They replaced patches of
flooring to prevent trips and prepared to tackle the ramp.
As
for eating, Evelyn-Gustave recommended a little-known tool: utensils and cups
that are specially weighted to counter Hough's tremors.
"It'll
be easier for you to hold," she promised.
The
set of utensils costs only about $20, one of the affordable tips the study is
generating. Hough's daughter had thought the only solution was an aide to feed
her mother, which the older woman hates.
"I
always said I wouldn't let my mom go to a nursing home," said Gloria J.
Hawks, 66, who is determined to care for her mother in the house the two share.
The
Capable project _ it stands for Community Aging in Place, Advancing Better
Living for Elders _ is being closely watched by Medicaid officials in other
states as a way to coordinate care and improve the functional problems that
lead to pricey, and sometimes preventable nursing home admissions. Today, it's
difficult for Medicaid patients to get these services.
With
more than $8 million in research money from the National Institutes of Health
and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the project goes beyond
home repair for health. It starts with a full-scale assessment of each
participant's needs.
In
one home, a Hopkins nurse discovered that an 82-year-old woman was taking all
of her 26 daily medications at once instead of staggered throughout the day,
leaving her disoriented and sedentary until she became too weak to get out of
bed without help.
First
the nurse fixed the medication schedule. Then the occupational therapist taught
the woman leg-strengthening exercises and installed $30 steel risers to make it
easier for her to get in and out of bed. Add new banisters, and soon she was
moving around on her own.
Whether
it is the cost or emotional ties, many people grow old in the same home where
they spent their younger, more agile years. An AARP survey in 2010 found nearly
90 percent of seniors wanted to remain in their current home for as long as
possible.
Yet
government figures show nearly 1 in 5 seniors living in the community have
trouble with at least one activity of daily living, such as walking or bathing.
Those
physical limitations become more difficult with doorways too narrow for walkers,
toilets that are lower than chairs, and kitchen counters too tall to sit while
cooking. Plus, nearly one-third of older adults experience a fall every year,
and most who are injured fell inside the home, according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
"You
don't think about that stuff," said Hattie Watties, who can't imagine
leaving her Baltimore home of 36 years, that's near children and grandchildren.
"You just do what you have to."
For
Watties, 74, that meant climbing onto kitchen counters to reach too-high
cabinets. Steep, dark stairs to the basement laundry only had a partial
railing, so she threw clothes down and inched her way after them.
No
more: Carpenter Tyrone White lowered Watties' cabinets to a comfortable reach,
installed railings, and showed how an energy-saving compact fluorescent light
bulb provided more light than a regular bulb in the dim stairway.
In
homes where it's even darker, White sticks motion-sensing lights by each step
to show where to aim your foot. They're less than $15 for a two-pack and run on
batteries, so no rewiring is needed.
The
work that perhaps has the biggest impact seen so far is a double railing for
stairs lets people rest their weight on both sides.
The
handymen, employed by the urban service corps Civic Works, also insist on
installing carbon monoxide monitors, which have detected leaking gas stoves in
some homes.
Do
these solutions really save money?
The
four-month intervention costs about $4,000 per participant, including the home
modifications and specialists' salaries. The average cost for nursing home care
in the U.S. is $6,700 a month, so even a modest delay could add up fast.
Szanton will track participants long term and, based on results from an earlier
pilot test of 40 high-risk seniors, hopes to delay nursing home entry by up to
a year in this frail population.
For
families, perhaps the bigger question is how long the solutions will last.
Evelyn-Gustave teaches families to brainstorm options as new challenges crop
up.
"We
can't be there forever. They need the skill to carry on," she said.
No comments:
Post a Comment