Author: Schuengel, C.; Tummers, J.; Embregts, P. J. C. M.; Leusink, G. L.
Title: Impact of the initial response to COVIDâ€19 on longâ€term care for people with intellectual disability: an interrupted time series analysis of incident reports Cord-id: gggen6l9 Document date: 2020_9_21
ID: gggen6l9
Snippet: BACKGROUND: The lockdownâ€measures in response to COVIDâ€19 taken by longâ€term care organisations might have impacted problem behaviour and behavioural functioning of people with intellectual disability. This study tested changes in reported incidents, in particular regarding aggression, unexplained absence and, for contrast, medication errors. METHODS: Metadata on weekly incident and nearâ€incident reports from 2016 to June 2020 involving over 14 000 clients with mild to serious intellectu
Document: BACKGROUND: The lockdownâ€measures in response to COVIDâ€19 taken by longâ€term care organisations might have impacted problem behaviour and behavioural functioning of people with intellectual disability. This study tested changes in reported incidents, in particular regarding aggression, unexplained absence and, for contrast, medication errors. METHODS: Metadata on weekly incident and nearâ€incident reports from 2016 to June 2020 involving over 14 000 clients with mild to serious intellectual disability of 's Heeren Loo, a longâ€term care organisation for people with intellectual disability, were subjected to interrupted time series analysis, comparing the COVIDâ€19 with the preâ€COVIDâ€19 period. RESULTS: The imposition of lockdownâ€measures coincided with a significant drop in incidents (total, P < .001; aggression, P = .008; unexplained absences, P = .008; and medication errors, P < .001). Incidents in total (P = .001) and with aggression (P < .001) then climbed from this initial low level, while medication errors remained stably low (P = .94). CONCLUSION: The rise in incidents involving aggression, against the background of generally lowered reporting, underlines the need for pandemic control measures that are suitable for people with intellectual disability in longâ€term care.
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