4.6 Article

CAPABLE program improves disability in multiple randomized trials

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
Volume 69, Issue 12, Pages 3631-3640

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.17383

Keywords

disability; health disparities; implementation

Funding

  1. Archstone Foundation
  2. John A. Hartford Foundation
  3. National Institute on Aging [R01AG040100]
  4. National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research [90RTGE0003]
  5. Rita and Alex Hillman Foundation
  6. Trinity Health Innovation Fund
  7. U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development [RP-15-MD-008]
  8. Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation, Inc.

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The CAPABLE program showed substantial improvements in activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily living in all six trials, with varying outcomes for other factors. Studies implementing the full-tested dose of CAPABLE demonstrated more improvement in activities of daily living and cost savings than studies implementing a decreased dose.
Background Programs to reduce disability are crucial to the quality of life for older adults with disabilities. Reducing disability is also important to avert unnecessary and costly hospitalizations, relocation, or nursing home placements. Few programs reduce disability and few have been replicated and scaled beyond initial research settings. CAPABLE is one such program initially tested in a randomized control trial and has now been tested and replicated in multiple settings. CAPABLE, a 10-session, home-based interprofessional program, provides an occupational therapist, nurse, and handyworker to address older adults' self-identified functional goals by enhancing individual capacity and home environmental supports. We examine evidence for the CAPABLE program from clinical trials embedded in different health systems on outcomes that matter most to older adults with disability. Methods Six trials with peer-reviewed publications or reports were identified and included in this review. Participants' outcomes included basic and instrumental activities of daily living (ADLs, IADLs), fall efficacy, depression, pain, and cost savings. Results A total of 1144 low-income, community-dwelling older adults with disabilities and 4236 matched comparators were included in the six trials. Participants were on average >= 74-79 years old, cognitively intact, and with self-reported difficulty with >= 1 ADLs. All six studies demonstrated improvements in ADLs and IADLs, with small to strong effect sizes (0.41-1.47). Outcomes for other factors were mixed. Studies implementing the full-tested dose of CAPABLE showed more improvement in ADLS and cost savings than studies implementing a decreased dose. Conclusions The CAPABLE program resulted in substantial improvements in ADLs and IADLs in all six trials with other outcomes varying across studies. A dose lower than the original protocol tested resulted in less benefit. The four studies examining cost showed that CAPABLE saved more than it costs to implement.

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