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Completeness of assisted bathing in nursing homes related to dementia and bathing method: results from a secondary analysis of cluster-randomised trial data

Completeness of assisted bathing in nursing homes related to dementia and bathing method: results from a secondary analysis of cluster-randomised trial data
Completeness of assisted bathing in nursing homes related to dementia and bathing method: results from a secondary analysis of cluster-randomised trial data
BACKGROUND: Bathing assistance is a core element of essential care in nursing homes, yet little is known for quality of assisted bathing or its determinants.

AIM:To explore differences in completeness of assisted bathing in relation to bathing method and resident characteristics.

METHODS: Secondary analysis of a cluster randomised trial including 500 nursing home residents designed to compare traditional bathing methods for skin effects and cost-consequences; GlinicalTrials.gov ID [NCT01187732]. Logistic mixed modelling was used to relate resident characteristics and bathing method to bathing completeness.

RESULTS: Bathing completeness was highly variable over wards. Apart from a large effect for ward, logistic mixed modelling indicated bathing was more often complete in case of washing without water (using disposable skin cleaning and caring materials; estimate 2.55, SE 0.17, P < 0.0001) and less often complete in residents with dementia (estimate -0.22, SE 0.08, P = 0.0040).

CONCLUSIONS: Introduction of washing without water is likely to lead to more bathing completeness in nursing homes. However, inequity in care was also identified with a view to highly variable bathing completeness over wards and more incomplete bathing by care staff in residents with dementia.

IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Monitoring the performance of assisted bathing in nursing homes is indicated for the identification of undesirable variation in essential care and poorly performing teams. The introduction of washing without water could serve the promotion of bathing completeness in nursing homes overall, but will not solve inequity issues for residents.
aged, baths, nursing, quality improvement, residential facilities
1748-3735
1-9
van Achterberg, Theo
eb49404e-62c6-427d-bb94-580254177a30
van Gaal, Betsie G.I.
1638dc4b-976d-4351-a790-efd1e7809965
Geense, Wytske W.
265067cf-ca18-4372-9f86-c0073acb4cd3
Verbeke, Geert
6ff74f99-0e82-4183-a97d-8bbf0b6708bb
van der Vleuten, Carine
e1be36fb-7dde-472e-9075-88cb609729cf
Schoonhoven, Lisette
46a2705b-c657-409b-b9da-329d5b1b02de
van Achterberg, Theo
eb49404e-62c6-427d-bb94-580254177a30
van Gaal, Betsie G.I.
1638dc4b-976d-4351-a790-efd1e7809965
Geense, Wytske W.
265067cf-ca18-4372-9f86-c0073acb4cd3
Verbeke, Geert
6ff74f99-0e82-4183-a97d-8bbf0b6708bb
van der Vleuten, Carine
e1be36fb-7dde-472e-9075-88cb609729cf
Schoonhoven, Lisette
46a2705b-c657-409b-b9da-329d5b1b02de

van Achterberg, Theo, van Gaal, Betsie G.I., Geense, Wytske W., Verbeke, Geert, van der Vleuten, Carine and Schoonhoven, Lisette (2015) Completeness of assisted bathing in nursing homes related to dementia and bathing method: results from a secondary analysis of cluster-randomised trial data. International Journal of Older People Nursing, 1-9. (doi:10.1111/opn.12104). (PMID:26663250)

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Bathing assistance is a core element of essential care in nursing homes, yet little is known for quality of assisted bathing or its determinants.

AIM:To explore differences in completeness of assisted bathing in relation to bathing method and resident characteristics.

METHODS: Secondary analysis of a cluster randomised trial including 500 nursing home residents designed to compare traditional bathing methods for skin effects and cost-consequences; GlinicalTrials.gov ID [NCT01187732]. Logistic mixed modelling was used to relate resident characteristics and bathing method to bathing completeness.

RESULTS: Bathing completeness was highly variable over wards. Apart from a large effect for ward, logistic mixed modelling indicated bathing was more often complete in case of washing without water (using disposable skin cleaning and caring materials; estimate 2.55, SE 0.17, P < 0.0001) and less often complete in residents with dementia (estimate -0.22, SE 0.08, P = 0.0040).

CONCLUSIONS: Introduction of washing without water is likely to lead to more bathing completeness in nursing homes. However, inequity in care was also identified with a view to highly variable bathing completeness over wards and more incomplete bathing by care staff in residents with dementia.

IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Monitoring the performance of assisted bathing in nursing homes is indicated for the identification of undesirable variation in essential care and poorly performing teams. The introduction of washing without water could serve the promotion of bathing completeness in nursing homes overall, but will not solve inequity issues for residents.

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Accepted/In Press date: 8 June 2015
Published date: 10 December 2015
Keywords: aged, baths, nursing, quality improvement, residential facilities
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 388441
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/388441
ISSN: 1748-3735
PURE UUID: dd34dc92-1b74-42ff-a9a9-86aa1eab3dd2
ORCID for Lisette Schoonhoven: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7129-3766

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Date deposited: 25 Feb 2016 15:33
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:41

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Contributors

Author: Theo van Achterberg
Author: Betsie G.I. van Gaal
Author: Wytske W. Geense
Author: Geert Verbeke
Author: Carine van der Vleuten

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