Valid and reliable measures of wandering are needed to study this troubling behavior. Although researchers have used various perspectives, definitions, and approaches to study wandering, spontaneous ambulation is a key characteristic across all views. Biomechanical activity devices for capturing movement provide one way to index wandering. This study examined four devices with ambulatory nursing home residents with dementia (N = 178) who wore devices simultaneously during four observations. Among the Actillume, StepWatch, Step Sensor, and TriTrac-R3D, the StepWatch yielded data from the highest proportion of observations, explained the most variance (63.9 percent) among all instruments, and was acceptable to nursing staff. Although the Step Sensor was the staff's preferred device, its performance was least acceptable for research purposes. Results support use of the StepWatch in future studies of wandering.
A significant number of nursing home residents exhibit behavior disturbances that are disruptive to the living and working environment in the nursing home. The most common disruptive behaviors cited by licensed nursing personnel included hitting/slapping, verbally aggressive remarks, screaming, pacing, wandering, and repetitive verbal requests. Self-injurious behavior, property destruction, and hiding things were not mentioned. Many of the nursing strategies listed by nursing staff as being used to alleviate disruptive behaviors are traditional care activities, eg, talking to and counseling patients, touching, or altering care. However, chemical and physical restraints were also frequently listed.
Direct observation and time-study techniques were used with a sample of 25 ambulatory, cognitively impaired subjects drawn from two long-term care settings to evaluate wandering behavior. The purposes of this study were (a) to describe the 24-hour distribution of wandering and direct ambulating cycles, (b) to examine the stability of wandering behavior over a 3-day interval, (c) to evaluate whether wandering during a 2-hour epoch is representative of that of a 24-hour day, and (d) to evaluate whether large-scale integrated (LSI) activity meters can substitute as an index or proxy for direct observation in the study of wandering behavior. Subjects displayed a daily average of 20.1 cycles encompassing 43.9 minutes of wandering ambulation and 28.8 cycles encompassing 40.4 minutes of direct ambulation. Wandering behavior was present in all subjects. However, wandering was highly variable from subject to subject. For a given subject, wandering was only moderately stable over a 3-day interval, but more so than direct ambulation. Similarly, a standard 2-hour epoch was moderately representative of daily wandering ambulation, but more so than for direct ambulation. Finally, LSI meters, when applied at the ankle and worn over longer (24-hr) rather than shorter (2-hr) intervals, are a promising means to index wandering behavior.
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