Self-care interventions of community-dwelling older adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Published
October 25, 2023
Journal
Frontiers in public health
PICOID
06466df7
DOI
Citations
0
Keywords
community-dwelling, health, healthy older adults, interventions, self-care
Copyright
Copyright © 2023 González-González and Requena.
Patients/Population/Participants

healthy community-dwelling older people

Intervention

self-care interventions

Comparison

physical health-related variables

Outcome

physical health-related variables, gait speed

Abstract

P
I
C
O

The current notion of "care in old age" should be reconceptualized in the ageing societies of the 21st century. Currently, "being old" means that one is actively involved in their care and has the desire to retain control and independence. Understand and analyze the efficacy of interventions in the physical and psychological self-care practices of healthy community-dwelling older people. Systematic review and meta-analysis. The guidelines of the PRISMA guide were followed. The methodological quality of the studies was checked using Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care criteria, and the search was performed between 2016 and 2021. Of the 1,866 evaluated, 8 studies met the criteria. The systematic review reveals that self-care interventions focus on physical health-related variables but not on psychological variables. The meta-analysis shows that interventions significantly improve physical health-related variables (care visits, hospital admission, medication, and gait speed). Self-care training programs should include psychological variables to increase health and well-being in healthy older people.

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