A Scoping Review of Homebound Older People: Definition, Measurement and Determinants
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Identifying the Research Question
2.3. Identifying Relevant Studies
2.4. Selecting Studies
2.5. Charting the Data and Summarizing and Reporting the Findings
3. Results
3.1. General Characteristics of the Study
3.2. Definition of HB and the Applied Conceptual Model
3.3. Operational Definition of HB
3.4. Factors Affecting HB
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Factor | Category | Examples |
---|---|---|
Individual factor | Demographic | Age, gender, race, marital status, education, occupation, income, health insurance, etc. |
Health characteristics | Height, weight, body mass index, comorbidity, illness, sarcopenia, laboratory analysis, etc. | |
Physical function | Activities of daily living, Instrumental activities of daily living, mobility difficulty, hearing and vision ability, etc. | |
Psychological function | Mental health, depression, anxiety, phobia, etc. | |
Cognitive function | Cognitive impairment | |
Health behavior | Exercise, eating habits, smoking, drinking, etc. | |
Social factor | Social participation, social support, social activity, social capital, social isolation, contact with various community health and social services, etc. | |
Environmental factor | Use of a mobility device to get around, stairs or steps at the entrance, population size, size of area, etc. |
Characteristics | Category | N | % |
---|---|---|---|
Design | Longitudinal study | 16 | 34.0 |
Cross-sectional study | 31 | 66.0 | |
Participants | Older people | 32 | 68.1 |
HB older people | 15 | 31.9 | |
Age | Above 50–64 | 10 | 21.3 |
Above 65 | 37 | 78.7 | |
Number of participants | ≤1000 | 22 | 46.8 |
1000~2000 | 8 | 17.0 | |
≥2000 | 17 | 36.2 | |
Country | Asia | 18 | 38.3 |
Europe | 9 | 19.1 | |
America | 20 | 42.6 | |
Publication year | 2010-present | 16 | 34.0 |
2001–2009 | 31 | 66.0 | |
Definition | Yes | 34 | 72.3 |
Theoretical model | Yes | 4 | 8.5 |
Author | Year | Country | Definition (Conceptual Framework) | Operational Definition | Going Out of the House | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Observation Period for Measure | Frequency | Meaning of “Outdoor Activities” | |||||
Bruce & McNamara [17] | 1992 | US | Being confined to the home | Two items: individual stayed in their bed or in a chair for most or all of the day during the last two weeks or they stayed indoors for most or all of the day during the last two weeks. | 2 weeks | ||
Lindesay & Thomson [18] | 1993 | UK | Being neither completely housebound nor blockbound or only going out of doors with the assistance of others | Individuals were considered housebound if they met the following two criteria: (1) they were either completely housebound or blockbound (for at least one month) and (2) interviewers judged that their current housebound or blockbound status was likely to be permanent. | 1 month | Never | Individual goes beyond their door or the boundary of the block |
Ganduli et al. [19] | 1996 | US | Leaving the house once per week or less | One item: “How often do you get out of the house?” | Once per week or less | ||
Engberg et al. [21] | 2001 | US | Being confined to the home Homebound (HB)older adults are those who, due to medical conditions and/or mobility-affecting impairments, are not able to freely leave their homes, and require help in doing so | Health Care Financing Agency Criteria | |||
Kono & Kanagawa [37] | 2001 | Japan | Being HB was defined according to the frequency of getting out and mobility. | Self-reported behaviors (10 behaviors) regarding getting out within a week | 1 week | Never/once per week | Ten behaviors: go to adult day care, going out to the garden, taking a walk, and so on. |
Inoue et al. [40] | 2001 | Japan | The state of remaining inside or just around the home during daily life (Aging process: the development of a chronic physical illness and disability in the elderly often results in a loss of physical and social independence and increased dependence on others) | One item: “In your daily life, do you leave home without assistance from others?” | Never | ||
Sharkey et al. [42] | 2002 | US | Medicare classified a person as HB if leaving the home requires considerable effort and occurs infrequently due to an illness or injury. | ||||
Kawamura et al. [37] | 2005 | Japan | A condition characterized by an infrequency of going outdoors Four categories of HB: by social contract with friends, neighbors, or relatives other than live-in family members and with/without assistance | One item: frequency of leaving the house (1) once per day or more, (2) once every 2–3 days, (3) about once per week, (4) rarely. | once per week or rarely | Leaving the house including going to the surrounding gardens or grounds | |
Choi & McDougal [43] | 2007 | US | HB older adults are those who, due to medical conditions and/or mobility-affecting impairments, are not able to freely leave their homes and require help in doing so | ||||
Katsumata et al. [44] | 2007 | Japan | One item: frequency of going outdoors | Once per week or less | |||
Locher et al. [45] | 2008 | US | Medicare definition of HB status: [An] individual [who] has a condition … that restricts [their] ability to leave home except with the assistance of another individual or the aid of a supportive device or [who] has a condition [where] leaving home is medically contraindicated | ||||
Cohen-Mansfield [8] | 2010 | Israel | One item: how often do they go outside of their home (more than once per week, or once a week or less) | Once per week or less | |||
Murayama et al. [29] | 2012 | Japan | One item: “How often do you usually go outside the house?” (once a week or less vs. more than once per week) | Usually | Once per week or less | ||
Cohen-Mansfield [46] | 2012 | Israel | One item: “How often do you go outside of your home?” (more than once per week, or once a week or less) | Once per week or less | |||
Choi et al. [28] | 2012 | South Korea | One item: “How often do you go outside of your home?” (more than once per week, or once a week or less) | 1 week | Never within a week | Go shopping or walking, visit the hospital or center (excludes leaving the house for a short period, for instance, to take out the trash) | |
Herr et al. [9] | 2013 | France | Remained inside their homes during the previous week or if they went out at all, only for health care purposes | One item for the non-bedridden: “Are you usually compelled to stay inside your home permanently (excluding an accident or temporary illness)?” | Usually | Never within a week | Accident or temporary illness |
Umegaki et al. [23] | 2015 | Japan | One item: frequency of excursions within a week | Less than once per week | |||
Musich et al. [5] | 2015 | US | Ambulatory disability without the restriction of additional medical needs | Self-reported ambulatory disability (5 items): HB state was identified by answering “yes” to any of the following five items: (1) have trouble getting around at home or outside your home; (2) use a cane, wheelchair or walker to move around at home or outside your home; (3) need help from another person to move around inside or outside your home; (4) need to stay in the house most or all of the time; (5) need to stay in bed most or all of the time | Any ambulatory disability | ||
Ornstein et al. [22] | 2015 | US | HB: never or rarely left home; semi-HB: only left home with assistance or had difficulty or needed helping to leave home (Gerontological conceptual framework: late-life disability – the impact of disability is based on the confluence of personal capacity and the ability of social support to compensate for capacity limitations) | Three items: (1) how often they left home to go outside in the last month (daily, most days (5–6 days per week), some days (2–4 days per week), rarely (once per week or less), or never); (2) they were asked whether they needed assistance; (3) they were asked if they were ever able to go out by themselves, or they reported going outside without help then reported whether they had difficulty doing the activity alone (regardless of the use of assistive devices) in the last month. | Previous month | Never or rarely (≤1 day) within a week | |
Takhashi et al. [31] | 2015 | Japan | A condition characterized by an infrequency of going outdoors | One item: frequency of going outdoors | Once per week or less | ||
Koyama et al. [47] | 2016 | Japan | Leaving home less often than once weekly, which reflects not only physical reasons for being confined to one’s home, but also psychological or geographical reasons | One item pertaining to frequency of going outdoors: “How often do you usually go outside the house?” | Usually | Less than once per week | Shopping, meeting up with people, walking, visiting the hospital, and other activities |
Negron-Blanco et al. [30] | 2016 | Spain | Having severe or extreme difficulty getting out of the house | One item from WHODAS-36: “In the past 30 days, how much difficulty did you have leaving home?” None/mild/moderate/severe/extreme or cannot do, with a response of “severe” or “extreme or cannot do” was construed as being HB. | Past 30 days | Severe or extreme/cannot leave home | |
Hamazake et al. [10] | 2016 | Japan | One item: “Do you go out more than once per week?” | Less than once per week | |||
Harada et al. [48] | 2016 | Japan | Going outdoors less than once per week | One item: “Do you usually go outside the house at least once per week?” | Usually | Once a week | |
De-Rosende [49] | 2017 | Spain | Considered HB state if the individual remained inside their home during the previous week or if they went out only for health care purposes (e.g., medical consultation or health emergencies) | One item: the number of days on which they left home during the previous week | Previous week | Never or only for health care purposes | |
Soones et al. [26] | 2017 | US | HB (never or rarely left home in the last month), semi-HB (only left home with assistance; needed help or had difficulty), non-HB (left home without help or difficulty) (Aday and Andersen’s Behavioral Model of Health Service Use and gerontological frameworks for the study of HB state due to disability) | Three items: “How often did you go out in the last month?” “Did anyone ever help you?” and “How much difficulty did you have leaving the house by yourself?” | Previous month | Never or rarely | |
Jing et al. [27] | 2017 | China | People who leave home less than once per week | Record of occasions on which the individual went out during the month before the survey (In cases where the going out counts for each week of the month differed, the total count for that month averaged by the number of weeks was considered) | Previous month | Less than once per week | |
Xiang & Brooks [25] | 2017 | US | “Never” or “rarely” left home in the last month HB, semi-HB: 1) they received help leaving home and would “never,” “rarely,” or “sometimes” go outside by themselves or 2) they did not receive help leaving home but reported “a lot,” “some,” or “a little” difficulty leaving home by themselves) | Three items: (1) how often they left home to go outside in the last month [daily, most days (5–6 days per week), some days (2–4 days per week), rarely (once per week or less), or never]; (2) they were asked whether they needed assistance; (3) they were asked if they were ever able to go out by themselves, or they reported going outside without help then reported whether they had difficulty doing the activity alone (regardless of the use of assistive devices) in the last month. | Previous month | Never or rarely (≤1 day) within a week | |
Uemura et al. [2] | 2018 | Japan | Going outdoors less than once per week | One item: “Do you go out at least once per week?” | At least once per week | ||
Meng et al. [39] | 2018 | China | Going out of the house once per week or less | Four items: (1) “Do you spend more time at home than going out, and is this the norm?” (2) “How many times do you go out to shop, walk, or visit the hospital?” [(1) More than once per day, (2) 2–3 days at a time, (3) once per week, (4) hardly ever go out] (3) “How often do you meet or communicate with friends, neighbors, or relatives outside the home?” [(1) 2–3 days at a time (2) once per week (3) once per month (4) hardly ever], (4) “If you go out, do you need help?” Higher scores indicate severity of the HB status. | |||
Sakurai et al. [6] | 2019 | Japan | One item: “How often do you usually go outdoors?” (Twice daily or more, daily, about once every 2–3 days, about once per week or less often) | Usually | Every few days or less within a week | Going shopping, talking a walk, visiting the hospital, or going out to work or to participate in social activities | |
Zhao et al. [24] | 2019 | Participants were defined as totally HB if they never or rarely left home. Semi-HB participants were those who needed help leaving home and would “never,” “rarely,” or “sometimes” go out by themselves, or they had “a lot,” “some,” or “a little” difficulty going out by themselves without help. | Three items: (1) how often they left home to go outside in the last month [daily, most days (5–6 days per week), some days (2–4 days per week), rarely (once a week or less), or never]; (2) whether they needed assistance; (3) if they were ever able to go out by themselves, or they reported going outside without help then reported whether they had difficulty doing the activity alone (regardless of the use of assistive devices) in the last month. | Previous month | Never or rarely (≤1 day) within a week | ||
Xiang et al. [32] | 2020 | US | Never or rarely leave the house. HB status defined on a continuum of outdoor mobility determined by physical capacity, availability of social support, and degree of autonomy. Determined the classification of HB state (HB, semi-HB, or non-HBd) by the frequency of going out, physical capacity, availability of social support, and degree of autonomy. (International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health and the concept of autonomy) | Four items: (1) “How often did you go out in the last month?” (responses on a 5-point Likert scale: never, rarely, some days, most days, every day) (2) “Did you ever have to stay in because no one was there to help you?” (3) “Did anyone ever help you?” (4) “How often did you go outside by yourself?” | Previous month | Never or rarely (≤1 day) within a week | |
Xiang et al. [20] | 2020 | US | Never or rarely went out of the home in the last month (An ecological model revised by Satariano [50]) | One item: “How often do you go outside of your home?” | Previous month | Never or rarely (≤1 day) |
Author | Year | Individual | Social | Environmental | Framework | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Demographic | Health Characteristic | Physical Function | Psychological Function | Cognitive Function | Health Behavior | |||||
Lindesay et al. [18]. | 1993 | O | O | O | O | O | O | |||
Ganguli et al. [19] | 1996 | O | O | O | O | O | O | |||
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Ko, Y.; Noh, W. A Scoping Review of Homebound Older People: Definition, Measurement and Determinants. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 3949. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18083949
Ko Y, Noh W. A Scoping Review of Homebound Older People: Definition, Measurement and Determinants. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(8):3949. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18083949
Chicago/Turabian StyleKo, Young, and Wonjung Noh. 2021. "A Scoping Review of Homebound Older People: Definition, Measurement and Determinants" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 8: 3949. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18083949