Rationale for Individualizing Interventions to Promote Adjustment to the Nursing Home |
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Authors: | Eileen Jones Porter Jean M. Kruzich |
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Affiliation: | (1) Sinclair School of Nursing, University of Missouri, Columbia;(2) School of Social Work, University of Washington, 4101 15th Avenue N.E., Seattle, WA, 98105-6299 |
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Abstract: | This study was designed to determine whether certain variables were predictors of nursing home residents' membership in groups representing qualitative categories of nursing home adjustment. Responses of 186 residents to an open-ended question about how they handled the change to nursing home life were coded as very good, fair, or poor; an adjustment variable was created on the basis of this classification. Analysis of variance of random samples from each adjustment group showed that affect and social support varied significantly with adjustment. However, when discriminant analysis was applied, the three groups could not be differentiated using measure of affect, life satisfaction, social support, participation in the decisions leading to admission, nursing home satisfaction, or health. Based on the conclusion that adjustment to the nursing home is a unique experience for each individual, strategies were proposed for individualizing interventions to enable adjustment. |
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Keywords: | adjustment nursing home individual interventions |
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