Objective

The objective of this trial, the Leiden 85-Plus Occupational Therapy Intervention Study (LOTIS), was to assess whether unsolicited occupational therapy, as compared to no therapy, can decelerate the increase in disability in high-risk elderly people.

Design

This was a randomised controlled trial with 2-y follow-up.

Setting

The study took place in the municipality of Leiden in the Netherlands.

Participants

The participants were 402 community-dwelling 85-y-old people, with a Mini-Mental State Examination score of >18 points at baseline.

Interventions

Participants in the intervention group were visited by an occupational therapist who provided training and education about assistive devices that were already present and who gave recommendations and information about procedures, possibilities, and costs of assistive devices and community-based services. Control participants were not visited by an occupational therapist.

Outcome measures

The primary outcome measure was the score achieved on the Groningen Activity Restriction Scale. Secondary outcome measures included self-evaluations of well-being and feelings of loneliness.

Results

THE PARTICIPANTS WERE EVENLY DIVIDED BETWEEN THE TWO GROUPS: 202 participants were allocated to the intervention group and 200 participants to the control group. Of the 202 participants randomised to occupational therapy, 55 participants declined the proposed intervention. An occupational therapist indicated that of the remaining 147 participants, 66 (45%) needed an occupational therapy intervention. A total of 44 new assistive devices and five community-based services were implemented. During follow-up there was a progressive increase in disability in the intervention group (mean annual increase, 2.0 points; SE 0.2; p < 0.001) and control group (mean annual increase, 2.1 points; SE 0.2; p < 0.001). The increase in disability was not significantly different between study groups (0.08 points; 95% CI, -1.1-1.2; p = 0.75). There was also no difference between study groups for any of the secondary outcome measures.

Conclusion

Unsolicited occupational therapy in high-risk elderly participants does not decelerate the increase in disability over time.

Overview publication

TitleRandomised controlled trial of unsolicited occupational therapy in community-dwelling elderly people: the LOTIS trial.
DateMay 1st, 2006
Issue namePLoS clinical trials
Issue numberv1.1:e2
DOI10.1371/journal.pctr.0010002
PubMed16871324
Authorsde Craen AJ, Gussekloo J, Blauw GJ, Willems CG & Westendorp RG
Read Read publication