Effects on clients' daily functioning and common features of reablement interventions: a systematic literature review

L.E. Buma*, S. Vluggen, S. Zwakhalen, G.I.J.M. Kempen, S.F. Metzelthin

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journal(Systematic) Review article peer-review

Abstract

This systematic review aimed to provide an overview of reablement interventions according to the recently published ReAble definition and their effect on Activities of Daily Living (ADL). In addition, the most common and promising features of these reablement interventions were identified. Four electronic bibliographic databases were searched. Articles were included when published between 2002 and 2020, which described a Randomised or Clinical Controlled Trial of a reablement intervention matching the criteria of the ReAble definition, and had ADL functioning as an outcome. Snowball sampling and expert completion were used to detect additional publications. Two researchers screened and extracted the identified articles and assessed methodological quality; discrepancies were resolved by discussion and arbitration by a third researcher. Twenty relevant studies from eight countries were included. Ten of these studies were effective in improving ADL functioning. Identifying promising features was challenging as an equal amount of effective and non-effective interventions were included, content descriptions were often lacking, and study quality was moderate to low. However, there are indications that the use of more diverse interdisciplinary teams, a standardised assessment and goal-setting method and four or more intervention components (i.e. ADL-training, physical and/or functional exercise, education, management of functional disorders) can improve daily functioning. No conclusions could be drawn concerning the effectiveness on ADL functioning. The common elements identified can provide guidance when developing reablement programmes. Intervention protocols and process evaluations should be published more often using reporting guidelines. Collecting additional data from reablement experts could help to unpack the black box of reablement.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)903-929
Number of pages27
JournalEuropean Journal of Ageing
Volume19
Issue number4
Early online date3 May 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2022

Keywords

  • Reablement
  • Activities of daily living
  • Independence
  • Daily functioning
  • Person-centred
  • FUNCTION-FOCUSED CARE
  • HOME INDEPENDENCE PROGRAM
  • DWELLING OLDER-ADULTS
  • PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY
  • NURSING-HOME
  • RESTORATIVE CARE
  • CONTROLLED-TRIAL
  • REHABILITATION
  • PEOPLE
  • RESIDENTS

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