Freedom of movement and health of nursing home residents with dementia: an exploratory cross-sectional study
Suzan P. van Liempd, Sascha R. Bolt, Katrien G. Luijkx

TL;DR
This study compared the health of dementia residents in nursing homes with different levels of freedom of movement but found no significant health differences between the two groups.
Contribution
The study is one of the few to explore health differences in dementia residents based on freedom of movement while considering multiple health dimensions.
Findings
No significant health differences were found between residents in semi-open and closed nursing homes.
The results contradict earlier research suggesting that more freedom of movement improves health in dementia residents.
Further longitudinal research is needed to understand the relationship between freedom of movement and health outcomes.
Abstract
Having more freedom of movement may relate to better health in nursing home (NH) residents with dementia. Research that tests whether residents in NHs with more freedom of movement are healthier compared to residents in closed NHs is scarce. Also, existing research on freedom of movement does not consider the diverse dimensions of health. This study explored health differences between two groups of nursing home residents with dementia with different levels of freedom of movement. We used a quantitative cross-sectional design to investigate differences in health between two groups of NH residents with dementia. One group lived in closed NHs (i.e., with closed unit doors) and the other group in semi-open NHs (i.e., with closed NH entrance doors). A total of 124 residents with dementia were recruited from five NHs in the Netherlands, of whom 61 residents lived in semi-open NHs and 63…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health and Psychiatry · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life
