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Featured researches published by John C. Beck.


Social Science & Medicine | 1999

Risk factors for functional status decline in community-living elderly people: a systematic literature review

Andreas E. Stuck; Jutta M Walthert; Thorsten Nikolaus; Christophe Büla; Christoph Hohmann; John C. Beck

To lay the groundwork for devising, improving and implementing strategies to prevent or delay the onset of disability in the elderly, we conducted a systematic literature review of longitudinal studies published between 1985 and 1997 that reported statistical associations between individual base-line risk factors and subsequent functional status in community-living older persons. Functional status decline was defined as disability or physical function limitation. We used MEDLINE, PSYCINFO, SOCA, EMBASE, bibliographies and expert consultation to select the articles, 78 of which met the selection criteria. Risk factors were categorized into 14 domains and coded by two independent abstractors. Based on the methodological quality of the statistical analyses between risk factors and functional outcomes (e.g. control for base-line functional status, control for confounding, attrition rate), the strength of evidence was derived for each risk factor. The association of functional decline with medical findings was also analyzed. The highest strength of evidence for an increased risk in functional status decline was found for (alphabetical order) cognitive impairment, depression, disease burden (comorbidity), increased and decreased body mass index, lower extremity functional limitation, low frequency of social contacts, low level of physical activity, no alcohol use compared to moderate use, poor self-perceived health, smoking and vision impairment. The review revealed that some risk factors (e.g. nutrition, physical environment) have been neglected in past research. This review will help investigators set priorities for future research of the Disablement Process, plan health and social services for elderly persons and develop more cost-effective programs for preventing disability among them.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1983

Active life expectancy.

Sidney Katz; Laurence G. Branch; Michael H. Branson; Joseph A. Papsidero; John C. Beck; David S. Greer

This study was designed to demonstrate the feasibility of forecasting functional health for the elderly. Using life-table techniques, we analyzed the expected remaining years of functional well-being, in terms of the activities of daily living, for noninstitutionalized elderly people living in Massachusetts in 1974. The expected years, or active life expectancy, showed a decrease, from 10 years for those aged 65 to 70 years to 2.9 for those 85 or older. Active life expectancy was shorter for the poor than for others, and women had a longer average duration of expected dependence than men. The measure of active life expectancy provides important information about health at a given population level, in terms other than death. This information can be used for actuarial purposes in planning and policy making. It is also useful in identifying high-risk populations for which preventive health care and medical care can compress morbidity during the last years of life.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1995

A Trial of Annual in-Home Comprehensive Geriatric Assessments for Elderly People Living in the Community

Andreas E. Stuck; Harriet Udin Aronow; Andrea Steiner; Cathy A. Alessi; Christophe Büla; Marcia N. Gold; Karen E. Yuhas; Rosane Nisenbaum; Laurence Z. Rubenstein; John C. Beck

BACKGROUND AND METHODS The prevention of disability in elderly people poses a challenge for health care and social services. We conducted a three-year, randomized, controlled trial of the effect of annual in-home comprehensive geriatric assessment and follow-up for people living in the community who were 75 years of age or older. The 215 people in the intervention group were seen at home by gerontologic nurse practitioners who, in collaboration with geriatricians, evaluated problems and risk factors for disability, gave specific recommendations, and provided health education. The 199 people in the control group received their regular medical care. The main outcome measures were the prevention of disability, defined as the need for assistance in performing the basic activities of daily living (bathing, dressing, feeding, grooming, transferring from bed to chair, and moving around inside the house) or the instrumental activities of daily living (e.g., cooking, handling finances and medication, housekeeping, and shopping), and the prevention of nursing home admissions. RESULTS At three years, 20 people in the intervention group (12 percent of 170 surviving participants) and 32 in the control group (22 percent of 147 surviving participants) required assistance in performing the basic activities of daily living (adjusted odds ratio, 0.4; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.2 to 0.8; P = 0.02). The number of persons who were dependent on assistance in performing the instrumental activities of daily living but not the basic activities did not differ significantly between the two groups. Nine people in the intervention group (4 percent) and 20 in the control group (10 percent) were permanently admitted to nursing homes (P = 0.02). Acute care hospital admissions and short-term nursing home admissions did not differ significantly between the two groups. In the second and third years of the study, there were significantly more visits to physicians among the participants in the intervention group than among those in the control group (mean number of visits per month, 1.41 in year 2 and 1.27 in year 3 in the intervention group, as compared with 1.11 and 0.92 visits, respectively, in the control group; P = 0.007 and P = 0.001, respectively). The cost of the intervention for each year of disability-free life gained was about


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1992

Inappropriate Medication Prescribing in Skilled-Nursing Facilities

Mark H. Beers; Joseph G. Ouslander; Susan Fingold; Hal Morgenstern; David B. Reuben; William H. Rogers; Mira J. Zeffren; John C. Beck

46,000. CONCLUSIONS A program of in-home comprehensive geriatric assessments can delay the development of disability and reduce permanent nursing home stays among elderly people living at home.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2002

Translating clinical research into practice: A randomized controlled trial of exercise and incontinence care with nursing home residents

John F. Schnelle; Cathy A. Alessi; Sandra F. Simmons; Nahla R. Al‐Samarrai; John C. Beck; Joseph G. Ouslander

OBJECTIVE To quantify the appropriateness of medication prescriptions in nursing home residents. DESIGN Prospective, cohort study. SETTING Twelve nursing homes in the greater Los Angeles area. PARTICIPANTS A total of 1106 nursing home residents. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The appropriateness of medication prescriptions was evaluated using explicit criteria developed through consensus by 13 experts from the United States and Canada. These experts identified 19 drugs that should generally be avoided and 11 doses, frequencies, or durations of use of specific drugs that generally should not be exceeded. RESULTS Based on the consensus criteria, 40% of residents received at least one inappropriate medication order, and 10% received two or more inappropriate medication orders concurrently; 7% of all prescriptions were inappropriate. Physicians prescribed a greater number of inappropriate medications for female residents. Regression analysis, corrected for clustering effects within facilities, showed that a greater number of inappropriate medication prescriptions were ordered in larger nursing homes. Inappropriate prescriptions were not related to the proportion of Medicaid (Medi-Cal) residents or the number of physicians practicing in the homes. CONCLUSIONS Inappropriate medication prescribing in nursing homes is common. Female residents and residents of large nursing homes are at the greatest risk for receiving an inappropriate prescription.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1995

A Randomized Trial of Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment in the Care of Hospitalized Patients

David B. Reuben; Gerald M. Borok; Girma Wolde-Tsadik; Daniel H. Ershoff; Linda K. Fishman; Virginia L. Ambrosini; Yunbao Liu; Laurence Z. Rubenstein; John C. Beck

OBJECTIVES: To examine clinical outcomes and describe the staffing requirements of an incontinence and exercise intervention.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2000

The geriatric Pain measure : Validity, reliability and factor analysis

Bruce A. Ferrell; Wendy M. Stein; John C. Beck

BACKGROUND Although many studies describe benefits from the comprehensive assessment of elderly patients by an interdisciplinary team (comprehensive geriatric assessment), the most supportive evidence for the process has come from programs that rely on specialized inpatient units and long hospital stays. We examined whether an inpatient geriatric consultation service might also be beneficial in a trial involving four medical centers of a group-practice health maintenance organization (HMO). METHODS We conducted a randomized clinical trial with 2353 hospitalized patients 65 years of age or older in whom at least 1 of 13 screening criteria were present: stroke, immobility, impairment in any basic activity of daily living, malnutrition, incontinence, confusion or dementia, prolonged bed rest, recent falls, depression, social or family problems, an unplanned readmission to the hospital within three months of a previous hospital stay, a new fracture, and age of 80 years or older. Of the 1337 patients assigned to the experimental group, 1261 (94 percent) received a comprehensive geriatric assessment in the form of a consultation, with limited follow-up; the 1016 patients assigned to the control group received usual care. The functional and health status of the patients was measured at base line and 3 and 12 months later; survival was assessed at 12 months. Subgroups of patients who might be presumed to benefit from comprehensive assessment were also studied. RESULTS The survival rate at 12 months was 74 percent in the experimental group and 75 percent in the control group. At base line, 3 months, and 12 months the scores of the two groups on measures of functional and health status were similar. The analysis of 16 subgroups did not identify any with either clearly improved functional status or improved survival. CONCLUSIONS In this HMO, comprehensive geriatric assessment by a consultation team, with limited follow-up, did not improve the health or survival of hospitalized patients selected on the basis of screening criteria.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1993

Characteristics and Quality of Prescribing by Doctors Practicing in Nursing Homes

Mark H. Beers; Susan Fingold; Joseph G. Ouslander; David B. Reuben; Hal Morgenstern; John C. Beck

BACKGROUND: Pain is a multidimensional experience that should be evaluated beyond an estimate of intensity. A multidimensional pain measure has not been developed for older persons undergoing comprehensive geriatric assessment.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2002

The Alcohol‐Related Problems Survey: Identifying Hazardous and Harmful Drinking in Older Primary Care Patients

Arlene Fink; Sally C. Morton; John C. Beck; Ron D. Hays; Karen Spritzer; Sabine M. Oishi; Alison A. Moore

Objectives: To describe the professional characteristics of doctors practicing in nursing homes and to determine whether those characteristics correlate with quality of prescribing.


Medical Care | 1982

Effect of Patient Age on Duration of Medical Encounters With Physicians

Emmett B. Keeler; David H. Solomon; John C. Beck; Robert C. Mendenhall; Robert L. Kane

OBJECTIVES: Older adults can incur problems at low levels of alcohol consumption because of age‐related physiological changes, declining health and functional status, and medication use. We have developed and tested a screening measure specifically for older people, the Alcohol‐Related Problems Survey (ARPS), to identify older adults with these risks.

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Arlene Fink

University of California

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Ron D. Hays

University of California

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Susan Vivell

University of California

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