Systematic review of EASY-care needs assessment for community-dwelling older people

Background: undertaking comprehensive geriatric assessments (CGAs) combined with long-term health and social care management can improve the quality of life of older people [ 1]. The EASY-Care tool is a CGA instrument designed for assessing the physical, mental and social functioning and unmet healt...

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Main Authors: Craig, Chris, Chadborn, Neil, Sands, Gina, Tuomainen, Helena, Gladman, John R.F.
Format: Article
Published: Oxford University Press 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40864/
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author Craig, Chris
Chadborn, Neil
Sands, Gina
Tuomainen, Helena
Gladman, John R.F.
author_facet Craig, Chris
Chadborn, Neil
Sands, Gina
Tuomainen, Helena
Gladman, John R.F.
author_sort Craig, Chris
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: undertaking comprehensive geriatric assessments (CGAs) combined with long-term health and social care management can improve the quality of life of older people [ 1]. The EASY-Care tool is a CGA instrument designed for assessing the physical, mental and social functioning and unmet health and social needs of older people in community settings or primary care. It has also been used as a frailty assessment tool and for gathering population-level data. Objective: to review the evidence of reliability, validity and acceptability of EASY-Care and its appropriateness for assessing the needs of community-dwelling older people. Methods: systematic search of literature databases using pre-defined search terms (January 1994—May 2014) for English language articles reporting on the reliability, validity, acceptability and implementation of EASY-Care in primary care and community settings. Eligible articles were critically reviewed. Discussion papers mapping professionals' use of the tool were also included as these could be considered an aspect of validity. Results: twenty-nine papers met the inclusion criteria and underwent data extraction. A narrative synthesis was performed, because there was a variety of quantitative and qualitative outcomes and characteristics. Reliability evidence for EASY-Care is minimal. Evidence for validity is good, and it has received numerous positive endorsements of acceptability in international settings from older people and practitioners. Conclusion: evidence supports the use of EASY-Care for individual needs assessment; further research is needed for other uses. Of the papers that made statements about who should administer EASY-Care, the majority indicated that nurses were preferable to self-completion.
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spelling nottingham-408642020-05-04T17:05:57Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40864/ Systematic review of EASY-care needs assessment for community-dwelling older people Craig, Chris Chadborn, Neil Sands, Gina Tuomainen, Helena Gladman, John R.F. Background: undertaking comprehensive geriatric assessments (CGAs) combined with long-term health and social care management can improve the quality of life of older people [ 1]. The EASY-Care tool is a CGA instrument designed for assessing the physical, mental and social functioning and unmet health and social needs of older people in community settings or primary care. It has also been used as a frailty assessment tool and for gathering population-level data. Objective: to review the evidence of reliability, validity and acceptability of EASY-Care and its appropriateness for assessing the needs of community-dwelling older people. Methods: systematic search of literature databases using pre-defined search terms (January 1994—May 2014) for English language articles reporting on the reliability, validity, acceptability and implementation of EASY-Care in primary care and community settings. Eligible articles were critically reviewed. Discussion papers mapping professionals' use of the tool were also included as these could be considered an aspect of validity. Results: twenty-nine papers met the inclusion criteria and underwent data extraction. A narrative synthesis was performed, because there was a variety of quantitative and qualitative outcomes and characteristics. Reliability evidence for EASY-Care is minimal. Evidence for validity is good, and it has received numerous positive endorsements of acceptability in international settings from older people and practitioners. Conclusion: evidence supports the use of EASY-Care for individual needs assessment; further research is needed for other uses. Of the papers that made statements about who should administer EASY-Care, the majority indicated that nurses were preferable to self-completion. Oxford University Press 2015-04-24 Article PeerReviewed Craig, Chris, Chadborn, Neil, Sands, Gina, Tuomainen, Helena and Gladman, John R.F. (2015) Systematic review of EASY-care needs assessment for community-dwelling older people. Age and Ageing, 44 (4). pp. 559-565. ISSN 1468-2834 EASY-Care geriatric assessment needs assessment systematic review older people https://academic.oup.com/ageing/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/ageing/afv050 doi:10.1093/ageing/afv050 doi:10.1093/ageing/afv050
spellingShingle EASY-Care
geriatric assessment
needs assessment
systematic review
older people
Craig, Chris
Chadborn, Neil
Sands, Gina
Tuomainen, Helena
Gladman, John R.F.
Systematic review of EASY-care needs assessment for community-dwelling older people
title Systematic review of EASY-care needs assessment for community-dwelling older people
title_full Systematic review of EASY-care needs assessment for community-dwelling older people
title_fullStr Systematic review of EASY-care needs assessment for community-dwelling older people
title_full_unstemmed Systematic review of EASY-care needs assessment for community-dwelling older people
title_short Systematic review of EASY-care needs assessment for community-dwelling older people
title_sort systematic review of easy-care needs assessment for community-dwelling older people
topic EASY-Care
geriatric assessment
needs assessment
systematic review
older people
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40864/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40864/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/40864/