Who lives in care homes in Greenland? A nationwide survey of demographics, functional level, medication use and comorbidities

Abstract Background Greenland is facing an ageing population, and little is known about the characteristics of the elderly population in Greenland. This study offers both a comparison and a description of the demographics, causes of admission, comorbidities and medication of the residents in care ho...

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Main Authors: N Albertsen, TM Olsen, TG Sommer, A Prischl, H Kallerup, S Andersen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:BMC Geriatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02442-0
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spelling doaj-efdeec76f2cb412fa680c94674f596c22021-09-19T11:13:08ZengBMCBMC Geriatrics1471-23182021-09-012111910.1186/s12877-021-02442-0Who lives in care homes in Greenland? A nationwide survey of demographics, functional level, medication use and comorbiditiesN Albertsen0TM Olsen1TG Sommer2A Prischl3H Kallerup4S Andersen5Department of Geriatric Medicine, Aalborg University HospitalDepartment of Psychiatry, Regionalshospitalet RandersDepartment of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Skåne University HospitalDepartment of Pathology, Odense University HospitalUpernavik Health CenterDepartment of Geriatric Medicine, Aalborg University HospitalAbstract Background Greenland is facing an ageing population, and little is known about the characteristics of the elderly population in Greenland. This study offers both a comparison and a description of the demographics, causes of admission, comorbidities and medication of the residents in care homes in the capital, major and minor towns in four of the five administrative regions of Greenland. Methods The study was conducted from 2010 to 2016 as a descriptive questionnaire-based cross-sectional study. Data from eligible residents from eight care homes were collected from the regular care staff. Data were categorised into three groups based on town size for analysis. Results 244 (100 %) of eligible residents participated in the study. Nearly 100 % were of Greenlandic ethnicity based on parents’ place of birth, and 62 % were women. The median age at admission/study was 69/71 years for men and 77/79 years for women (both p = 0.001). The median Body Mass Index was 25.6 kg/m2, more than half of the population were previous- or never-smokers and less than ten per cent consumed more than ten drinks of alcohol per week. The most common causes of admission were dementia (25.4 %), stroke (19.3 %) and social causes (11.1 %), while stroke (30.7 %), dementia (29.5 %) and musculoskeletal diseases (25.8 %) were the most common diagnoses at the time of the study. The Barthel Index was used to estimate the residents’ level of independence, and residents in smaller towns were found to have a higher level of independence than residents in the capital. The median number of prescribed medications was five, and more residents in the capital were prescribed more than ten medications than elsewhere in Greenland. Conclusions This study is the first to describe care home residents in Greenland. We found a population younger than residents in comparable Danish care homes and that women were older than men at admission. In addition, care home residents in the capital had a lower level of independence and a higher number of prescribed medications, which could relate to differences in morbidity, access to health care services and differences in social circumstances influencing the threshold for care home admission.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02442-0ArcticGreenlandElderlyCare HomesInuitBarthel Index
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N Albertsen
TM Olsen
TG Sommer
A Prischl
H Kallerup
S Andersen
spellingShingle N Albertsen
TM Olsen
TG Sommer
A Prischl
H Kallerup
S Andersen
Who lives in care homes in Greenland? A nationwide survey of demographics, functional level, medication use and comorbidities
BMC Geriatrics
Arctic
Greenland
Elderly
Care Homes
Inuit
Barthel Index
author_facet N Albertsen
TM Olsen
TG Sommer
A Prischl
H Kallerup
S Andersen
author_sort N Albertsen
title Who lives in care homes in Greenland? A nationwide survey of demographics, functional level, medication use and comorbidities
title_short Who lives in care homes in Greenland? A nationwide survey of demographics, functional level, medication use and comorbidities
title_full Who lives in care homes in Greenland? A nationwide survey of demographics, functional level, medication use and comorbidities
title_fullStr Who lives in care homes in Greenland? A nationwide survey of demographics, functional level, medication use and comorbidities
title_full_unstemmed Who lives in care homes in Greenland? A nationwide survey of demographics, functional level, medication use and comorbidities
title_sort who lives in care homes in greenland? a nationwide survey of demographics, functional level, medication use and comorbidities
publisher BMC
series BMC Geriatrics
issn 1471-2318
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background Greenland is facing an ageing population, and little is known about the characteristics of the elderly population in Greenland. This study offers both a comparison and a description of the demographics, causes of admission, comorbidities and medication of the residents in care homes in the capital, major and minor towns in four of the five administrative regions of Greenland. Methods The study was conducted from 2010 to 2016 as a descriptive questionnaire-based cross-sectional study. Data from eligible residents from eight care homes were collected from the regular care staff. Data were categorised into three groups based on town size for analysis. Results 244 (100 %) of eligible residents participated in the study. Nearly 100 % were of Greenlandic ethnicity based on parents’ place of birth, and 62 % were women. The median age at admission/study was 69/71 years for men and 77/79 years for women (both p = 0.001). The median Body Mass Index was 25.6 kg/m2, more than half of the population were previous- or never-smokers and less than ten per cent consumed more than ten drinks of alcohol per week. The most common causes of admission were dementia (25.4 %), stroke (19.3 %) and social causes (11.1 %), while stroke (30.7 %), dementia (29.5 %) and musculoskeletal diseases (25.8 %) were the most common diagnoses at the time of the study. The Barthel Index was used to estimate the residents’ level of independence, and residents in smaller towns were found to have a higher level of independence than residents in the capital. The median number of prescribed medications was five, and more residents in the capital were prescribed more than ten medications than elsewhere in Greenland. Conclusions This study is the first to describe care home residents in Greenland. We found a population younger than residents in comparable Danish care homes and that women were older than men at admission. In addition, care home residents in the capital had a lower level of independence and a higher number of prescribed medications, which could relate to differences in morbidity, access to health care services and differences in social circumstances influencing the threshold for care home admission.
topic Arctic
Greenland
Elderly
Care Homes
Inuit
Barthel Index
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02442-0
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