Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
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The high comorbidity of medical illnesses and late life depression poses both challenges and opportunities. Challenges in assessment techniques, diagnosis, and specific prognosis affect clinical care and research methodology alike. However, investigations that turn this vexing "confound" into research questions may prove fruitful. ⋯ Finally, from a societal perspective, the comorbidity of depression and medical illness likely has a tremendous impact on both health and health care delivery for older adults. Further study is needed to identify more specific approaches to treatment. Yet existing data clearly support a policy of routine psychiatric assessment of older people in general medical settings...
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
A walking program for nursing home residents: effects on walk endurance, physical activity, mobility, and quality of life.
To determine the effects of a 12-week walking program on walk endurance capacity, physical activity level, mobility, and quality of life in ambulatory nursing home residents who had been identified as having low physical activity levels and low walk endurance capacities. To determine the effects of 12 versus 22 weeks of walk training on walk endurance capacity, physical activity level, mobility, and quality of life in ambulatory nursing home residents. ⋯ Twelve weeks of daily walking at a self-selected walking pace by ambulatory nursing home residents produced significant improvements in walk endurance capacity. No other significant changes were noted in physical activity level, mobility, or quality of life in either group after the intervention. Also, there were no side effects, such as increases in falls or cardiovascular complications, due to the walking intervention. Lengthening the walking program to 22 weeks produced no further significant changes in any outcome measures.
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To examine the anticipated decisions to consent to or to forgo life-sustaining treatment by spouses of patients with Alzheimer's disease and to describe the relationship of spouse and patient characteristics to predicted decisions. ⋯ The results provide evidence that spouses of patients with AD anticipate forgoing life-sustaining treatments in the face of coma but are less sure about choices for critical illness. Although preliminary in nature, findings suggest that doctors, nurses, and social workers need to provide additional support to spouses choosing to forgo rather than consent to treatment and need to inquire as to what spouses perceive as the factors that are important to them in making a decision.
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Letter Clinical Trial
An abbreviated Mini-Mental State Exam for medically ill older adults.