Exploring Post-COVID-19 Functional Outcomes in Residents in Long-Term Care Homes in British Columbia, Canada

Author:

Rajlic Gordana1ORCID,Sorensen Janice M.1,Mithani Akber1

Affiliation:

1. Fraser Health Authority, Surrey, BC, Canada

Abstract

Research on functional outcomes in long-term care (LTC) home residents after COVID-19 infection is limited. In the current study, we examined outcomes in 1,310 LTC residents with a positive COVID-19 test in the period from March 2020 to April 2022 (“COVID” group). We also reviewed outcomes in residents in the same LTC homes without a history of COVID-19 during the same period (“No-COVID” group, n = 2,301). In a retrospective longitudinal design, we explored activities of daily living (ADLs), cognitive function, and clinical care needs over time. Change was assessed from the last assessment before contracting COVID-19 to three assessments subsequent to COVID-19, over on average seven months after infection. We found deterioration over time in ADLs and cognitive performance in both groups. The change in ADLs and clinical care needs was slightly greater in the COVID than the No-COVID group from baseline to the first follow-up assessment; in subsequent assessments, the change was similar in both groups. Overall, we observed similar functional outcomes among surviving residents in the two groups, with initially greater deterioration in ADLs and clinical care needs in residents with a history of COVID-19 followed by a trajectory resembling the one in the No-COVID residents.

Funder

COVID-19 Pandemic Response and Impact Grant (Co-RIG) Program of the Foundation for Advancing Family Medicine and the Canadian Medical Association Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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