A2 Refereed review article in a scientific journal

Safety of older people at home: An integrative literature review




AuthorsKivimäki Taina, Stolt Minna, Charalambous Andreas, Suhonen Riitta

PublisherBlackwell Pub.

Publication year2020

JournalInternational Journal of Older People Nursing

Article numbere12285

Volume15

Issue1

Number of pages23

ISSN1748-3735

eISSN1748-3743

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/opn.12285

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/43843876


Abstract

Aim



The aim of this review was to examine the relevant health
literature, to describe safety in the homes of older and older people's
perceptions and understanding of their safety at home based on current
literature.



Background

Safety is a multifaceted, basic need of older people living
at home. Many studies are hospital focused and few focus on safety at home.
Research on the safety of older people at home appears to be under‐researched.



Methods



MEDLINE, CINAHL, Scopus and Web of Science databases from
the earliest to August 2017 were investigated. The integrative literature
review was conducted in December 2017. The full text of the remaining n = 93
papers was then screened for relevance by inclusion and exclusion criteria
which reduced the number by 59 to n = 34.



Results



Four dimensions of safety at home were discovered, namely
physical, social, emotional and mental, and cognitive safety. Safety dimensions
had both positive and negative components. Older people's main wish was to be
able to live in their own home for as long as possible. Their perceptions of
safety at home was categorised as active living, coping at home, managed living
and the knowledge of the existence of disease.



Conclusions



The safety of older people at home is a worldwide concern.
Identification of safety issues can assist in developing measures to help
people stay at home for longer as they age. The management of this would need
to take account of all four dimensions of safety, in ways that promote ageing
at home.



Implications for practice



Learning, understanding and developing new strategies about
safety affect everyone who visits the home of older people, and stakeholders
have an important role to identify safety risks.


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