BMJ 2001;323:719-725 ( 29 September )
Papers
Effectiveness of home based support for older people: systematic
review and meta-analysis
Commentary: When, where, and why do preventive home
visits work?
Effectiveness of home based support for older people: systematic
review and meta-analysis
Ruth Elkan, research fellow a, Denise Kendrick, senior
lecturer b, Michael Dewey, senior
lecturer c, Michael Hewitt, evaluation
and effectiveness manager d, Jane Robinson, professor
emeritus a, Mitch Blair, senior
lecturer in child health e, Deb Williams, lecturer a, Kathy Brummell, health visitor a. a Editorial
by Clark School
of Nursing, Postgraduate Division, University of Nottingham, Queen's
Medical Centre, Nottingham NG7 2UH, b School of Community Health Sciences,
Division of General Practice, Floor 13, Tower Building, University
Park, Nottingham NG7 2RD, c School of Community Health Sciences, Trent Institute
for Health Services Research, University of Nottingham, Queen's
Medical Centre, Nottingham, d Evaluation Audit
Centre for Research, Kingsmill Centre, Sutton in Ashfield,
Nottinghamshire NG17 4JL, e Northwick Park and St Mark's NHS
Trust, Harrow, Middlesex HA1 3UJ
Correspondence to: R Elkan
Ruth.Elkan{at}nottingham.ac.uk
 |
Abstract |
Objective:
To evaluate the effectiveness of home
visiting programmes that offer health promotion and preventive care to older people.
Design:
Systematic review and meta-analysis of 15 studies of home visiting.
Participants:
Older people living at home, including
frail older people at risk of adverse outcomes.
Outcome measures:
Mortality, admission to hospital,
admission to institutional care, functional status, health status.
Results:
Home visiting was associated with a
significant reduction in mortality. The pooled odds ratio for eight
studies that assessed mortality in members of the general elderly
population was 0.76 (95% confidence interval 0.64 to 0.89). Five
studies of home visiting to frail older people who were at risk of
adverse outcomes also showed a significant reduction in mortality
(0.72; 0.54 to 0.97). Home visiting was associated with a significant reduction in admissions to long term institutional care in members of
the general elderly population (0.65; 0.46 to 0.91). For three studies
of home visiting to frail, "at risk" older people, the pooled odds
ratio was 0.55 (0.35 to 0.88). Meta-analysis of six studies of home
visiting to members of the general elderly population showed no
significant reduction in admissions to hospital (odds ratio 0.95; 0.80 to 1.09). Three studies showed no significant effect on health
(standardised effect size 0.06; -0.07 to 0.18). Four studies
showed no effect on activities of daily living (0.05; -0.07 to
0.17).
Conclusion:
Home visits to older people can reduce
mortality and admission to long term institutional care.
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What is already known on this topic
The benefits of regular preventive home visits to older people are the
subject of controversy
A recent systematic review found no clear evidence that preventive home
visits were effective
What this study adds
This meta-analysis of 15 trials shows that home visiting can reduce
mortality and admission to institutional care among older
people
|
 |
Introduction |
The objective of enabling older people to remain in their own
homes has been a cornerstone of government policy for several decades.
A recent royal commission on long term care has endorsed this
objective, recommending that more emphasis be given to health promotion
and other preventive measures as a means of delaying the onset of
illness and dependency that eventually lead older people to need long
term care.1
One way of promoting health and delivering preventive care to older
people is through regular home visiting. Several studies of home visits
by teams based in general practices have shown promising results, with
home visitors identifying a large number of previously unmet medical
and social needs.2-7 Health visitors are well placed to
promote the health of older people and to provide surveillance and
support. Although British health visitors have historically provided
services to mothers and young children rather than older people, the
potential of the health visitor in meeting the needs of older people in
the community has been widely recognised.
8 9
Despite
this, today's generic health visitor devotes little time to older
people.10-12
Two previous systematic reviews examined the effectiveness of home
visits to older people. In 1993, Stuck et al performed a meta-analysis
of 28 controlled trials that evaluated the outcomes of comprehensive
geriatric assessment.13 They found significant positive
effects of home visiting on mortality, hospital admission and
readmission, and nursing home placements.13 A second
systematic review of 15 trials of preventive home visits to older
people by van Haastregt et al (2000) found no consistent evidence that preventive home visits had a significant effect on any
outcome.14
In view of the shortcomings of previous reviews, and the lack of
consistency between their findings, we thought it important to
undertake a meta-analysis of all relevant studies available to date to
clarify the benefits of preventive home visiting.
 |
Method |
As part of a larger systematic review to assess the effects of
home visiting to all client groups, including parents and children, we
reviewed studies on the effects of home visits to people aged 65 years
and above.
Inclusion criteria
Papers were included in the review if they reported an empirical
study, with a comparison group, evaluating a home visiting programme.
We included randomised and non-randomised controlled trials. The home
visitor had to undertake tasks within the scope of British health
visitors
namely, surveillance, support, health promotion, and the
prevention of ill health. The intervention had to involve the pursuit
of a wide range of preventive outcomes rather than a single goal such
as the prevention of falls or increased uptake of immunisation. We
excluded studies in which the home visitor was a specialist in a branch
of nursing other than health visiting (for example, community
psychiatric or district nursing) and those in which the intervention
was delivered solely by volunteers. We also excluded studies that
involved only screening and referral, with no other input from the home visitor.
 |
Results |
Fifteen studies that met our inclusion criteria reported
outcomes relating to older people; 13 were randomised controlled trials.15-27 The two others used a quasi-experimental
design.
28 29
The 15 studies were divided into two groups:
one group of nine studies assessed members of the general elderly
population,
15-17 19 21-25
and a second group of six
studies assessed vulnerable older people who were at risk of adverse
outcomes.
18 20 26-29
The second group consisted of four
studies of older people recently discharged from hospital who were at
risk of further admissions
18 26-28
and two
studies of frail older people who had been referred to home care
agencies.
20 29
The aims and content of the studies are shown in table 1. Details of
the results of the studies are shown in table
2.
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Table 1.
Aims, outcome measures, and content of
interventions of studies included in review of home based support for
older people
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Table 2.
Outcomes of home visits to elderly people:
mortality, admission to hospital, health, functional ability, and long
term institutional care
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Findings
Of eight trials that measured mortality in elderly people in
general,
15-17 19 22-25
three reported significant reductions.15-17 Meta-analysis of these eight trials gave
a pooled odds ratio of 0.76 (95% confidence interval 0.64 to 0.89),
indicating that home visiting was associated with reduced mortality.
Five studies assessed mortality among frail older people who were at risk of adverse outcomes. The pooled odds ratio of four randomised trials
18 20 26 27
was 0.72 (0.54 to 0.97), again
indicating that home visiting had a significant effect (fig
1).

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Fig 1.
Log odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals
for mortality in general elderly population (test for homogeneity:
Q=6.91, df=7, P=0.44) and frail elderly population (Q=0.87, df=3,
P=0.83)
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Of six studies that measured admissions to hospital in the general
elderly population,
15 16 19 23-25
only one reported a significant reduction.15 The pooled odds ratio for all six
studies was 0.95 (0.80 to 1.09), suggesting that home visiting did not have a significant effect (fig 2). Three studies examined admission to
hospital of frail elderly people who were considered "at
risk."
18 28 29
Meta-analysis was not possible because
insufficient information was provided. None found any significant
effect. Five studies measured health status among the general elderly
population,
16 21-23 25
of which two reported
improvements.
16 21
Meta-analysis of the results of three
studies
16 23 25
showed no significant effects (standardised effect size 0.06, -0.07 to 0.18). Among the studies that
assessed the at risk population, the only study that measured health
status26 reported no significant effect (fig
3).

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Fig 2.
Log odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals
for hospital admissions in general elderly population (test for
homogeneity: Q=1.42, df=3, P=0.04)
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|
Seven studies measured functional ability in the general elderly
population.
16 17 19 22-25
None reported a
significant improvement in activities of daily living or other
similar measures of functional ability. However, the only two studies
that measured instrumental activities of daily
living
19 24
both reported significant improvements. Meta-analysis of four studies that measured activities of daily living
19 23-25
showed no significant effect
(standardised effect size 0.05, -0.07 to 0.17). Of two studies that
assessed functional ability among older people considered to be "at
risk,"
26 28
neither reported significant improvements
(fig 4).
Only one of five studies that reported admission to residential
nursing homes of members of the general elderly
population
15 16 19 23 24
found a significant
reduction.24 However, meta-analysis of the results of four
of these studies
15 16 23 24
gave
a pooled odds ratio of 0.65 (0.46 to 0.91), indicating that home
visiting did have a significant effect in reducing admissions to
institutional care.
Of four studies reporting admission to institutional care of older
people considered to be "at risk,"
18 20 27 28
two reported significant reductions.
18 20
The pooled odds
ratio for the three randomised trials entered into a
meta-analysis
18 20 27
was 0.55 (0.35 to 0.88), suggesting that home visiting was successful in
reducing admissions for at risk older people (fig 5).
Meta-regressions
Our meta-regressions showed that none of our three predictors
(population type, duration of intervention, and age group) had any
effect on mortality or admissions to institutional care. The analysis
of hospital admissions was complicated by the small number of studies,
the lack of any studies on elderly people who were considered to be at
risk, and the fact that one study25 was of poor
methodological quality.
 |
Discussion |
Our review of the results of home visiting programmes shows that
home visiting is effective in reducing mortality and admission to
long term institutional care among members of the general elderly population and frail older people who are at risk of adverse outcomes. We did not find any significant reduction in admissions to hospital. The observed heterogeneity in relation to this outcome (see fig 2)
seems to be accounted for largely by the study of Balaban et al,25 which was of poor methodological quality. Balaban
and colleagues conceded themselves that they had failed to control successfully for differences in health status between intervention and
control participants at entry into the trial, resulting in a control
group with better health than the intervention group. The lack of any
significant effect in reducing admission to hospital may also have been
the result of two opposing effects: on the one hand, home visiting may
have resulted in increased admissions of older people whose need for
hospital care might otherwise have been neglected; on the other hand,
some admissions might have been averted through home visits.
Impact on health and functional status
The absence of evidence of improved health and functional status
requires explanation. Undoubtedly one reason for the failure to find
any significant differences between intervention and control groups was
that those in poorest health had died, so that this outcome could be
measured only on a subset of the original sample
namely, those who had
survived. Another possible explanation is that where self rated
measures have been used, the presence of the home visitor may have
encouraged older people to express their problems more easily, thereby
obscuring differences between intervention and control group. The tools
used may not have been sensitive enough to detect modest improvements
in health or functional ability.23 Also chronic and
relatively intractable health and functional problems may require a
greater, or different type of, input than that provided by the home
visitors in the studies we
reviewed.17

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Fig 3.
Effect sizes and 95% confidence intervals for
health status (test for homogeneity: Q=2.89, df=2,
P=0.24)
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Fig 4.
Effect sizes and 95% confidence intervals for
functional ability (test for homogeneity: Q=3.67, df=3,
P=0.30)
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Fig 5.
Log odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals
for institutional care in general elderly population (test for
homogeneity: Q=3.19, df=3, P=0.36) and frail elderly population
(Q=2.64, df=2, P=0.27)
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Characteristics of home visiting programmes
Why some of the programmes were more successful than others in
reducing mortality is puzzling, given that this was not the primary
goal of any study. The three studies of members of the general elderly
population that reported significant reductions in
mortality15-17 did not share any characteristics that
differentiated them from the other studies in this group. One feature
is the breadth of response of the health visitor. In the inner city
group in the study by Vetter et al17 and in the study by
Hendriksen et al15 the health visitor referred to a wide
range of outside agencies, whereas in the rural group in the study by
Vetter et al and in other studies that showed no reduction in mortality there was a narrower focus on referral to a general practitioner.
It is difficult to know which components of the home visitors'
interventions made a difference to any of the outcomes assessed. As all
the programmes were multifaceted, the independent effect of a
particular component of care was difficult to assess. Moreover, in the
papers we reviewed, descriptions of what the home visitor did were
brief, giving little feel for the processes involved. Future studies
would benefit from a greater focus on the process of delivering care
and on attempting to identify which components of the intervention work.
Our finding from the meta-regression that the effect of home visiting
did not depend on whether the intervention was targeted at elderly
people who are at risk or whether it was delivered more widely is
interesting. It suggests that the exclusion of people who are not at
increased risk from such interventions may not, on the present
evidence, be justified. Similarly, the finding that the effect of home
visiting did not depend on the age of participants suggests that the
exclusion of "younger" elderly people from such interventions may
also be unjustified. However, more work is required to test our
findings here, as the evidence from individual studies we reviewed
suggests that those in poorer health may benefit more from the
intervention23 and that interventions targeted more
intensively on those identified as having problems are more
effective.16 A recent study by Stuck et al, published after the end of our literature search, found that disability was
reduced in older people at low risk at baseline but not in those at
high risk.30 More work is clearly required to assess which
populations benefit most from home visiting. Further work could also
assess the optimal intensity of home visiting. As several studies did
not report the intensity of visits, the importance of this factor was
difficult to gauge.
Comparisons with other studies
Our findings are in marked contrast to those of van Haastregt et
al,14 who, in the absence of a meta-analysis of the
results of the trials they reviewed, failed to find evidence that home
visiting resulted in any consistent positive outcomes. Though only four
out of the 15 studies we reviewed found a significant effect on
mortality, we have shown significant positive effects by combining
data. Similarly, only three of the 15 studies showed a significant
reduction in admissions to institutional care.
18 20 24
Yet by pooling data from all the studies that assessed this outcome, we
have shown significant positive effects. It seems that the decision of
van Haastregt et al not to perform a meta-analysis might have led them
to underestimate the effectiveness of preventive home visits to older people.
Clearly, all meta-analyses contain heterogeneity. However, unlike van
Haagstregt and colleagues, we did not consider that differences between
the interventions meant their results could not be combined. By
grouping our trials into two more homogeneous types of intervention
(those aimed at the general elderly population and those aimed at frail
older people who were at risk of adverse outcomes), we considered that
meta-analysis was justified. While the number of trials in each
meta-analysis was small, the results are encouraging, confirming the
earlier promising findings of Stuck et al.13 On the basis
of our own results, we cannot endorse the conclusion of van Haastregt
et al that the evidence of effectiveness is so modest and inconsistent
that home visits to older people should be discontinued. On the
contrary, we believe that further trials to assess the effectiveness of
home based support to older people may confirm our positive findings,
and we look forward to the results of ongoing
trials.31
 |
Acknowledgments |
The views expressed in this paper do not necessarily reflect
those of the NHS Executive.
 |
Footnotes |
Funding: NHS research and development health technology
assessment programme.
Competing interests: JR has been reimbursed by the Community
Practitioners and Health Visitors Association, the Royal College of
Nursing, and the Royal College of Practitioners for attending conferences.
 |
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(Accepted 13 June 2001)
Commentary: When, where, and why do preventive home
visits work?
Matthias Egger, senior
lecturer in clinical epidemiology.
MRC Health Services
Research Collaboration, Department of Social Medicine, University of
Bristol, Bristol BS8 2PR
m.egger{at}bristol.ac.uk
This is the second of two reviews of trials of preventive
home visits to elderly people published in the BMJ in the
past 18 months. Elkan et al conclude that home visits reduce mortality and admissions to nursing homes, whereas last year's review found no
evidence supporting their effectiveness and argued that existing programmes should be reconsidered.1 Why did the two
reviews reach such contrasting conclusions?
The main reason is the different methodological approaches adopted by
the two groups. Van Haastregt et al reported the results from
individual trials as "no significant effects" or "significant favourable effects."1 For example, they found a
"significant" reduction (P<0.05) in admissions to institutions in
only two out of seven trials and that overall effects were "modest
and inconsistent." This "vote counting" approach is clearly
unsound as it ignores the direction and size of effects from individual
studies and their confidence intervals.
2 3
If the
BMJ and other journals adopt the recent recommendation that
"the description of differences as statistically significant is not
acceptable,"4 then the confusion created by such
analyses could be avoided.
In contrast to the paper by van Haastregt et al, the present review
used meta-analysis to summarise results. The potential of this approach
is illustrated in the figure, which shows the effects on admission to
long term care: six out of eight trials show a beneficial effect of
preventive home visits. The evidence against the null hypothesis was
fairly strong in two trials (Stuck P=0.021 and Hall P=0.025), but weak
in the others (P>0.10). The pooled analysis, however, indicates that
there is convincing evidence for a clinically important reduction in
the risk of admission to long term institutional care (P=0.001). The
reduction in the odds of admission is likely to be at least 17% and
could be as large as 51%.
Van Haagstregt et al argued that the data should not be combined
statistically, given the heterogeneous nature of the interventions and
the populations enrolled in the different trials.1
Interestingly, there was little evidence of heterogeneity between
trials in the analysis shown in the figure (P=0.46) and those
performed by Elkan et al. The power of tests of heterogeneity is
notoriously low, and combining studies is always questionable if there
is important clinical heterogeneity. However, only by graphically and
statistically analysing effect estimates from individual trials can we
identify factors introducing heterogeneity. Elkan et al attempted this but their analysis was limited to a few crude factors. For example, they explored the importance of the underlying risk by stratifying trials according to whether older people from the general population or
frail elderly people had been enrolled. They found no difference between these groups, which may be owing to misclassification of the
Hall study. This trial was supposedly performed in frail elderly
people, but mortality in the control group was low (see figure). When
the effects are ordered according to mortality, as shown, they get
smaller with increasing mortality in the control group (figure). This
important finding was recently confirmed by Stuck et al in a trial
designed to examine effects in older people at low and high risk for
admission to a nursing home.5
The analysis carried out by Elkan et al found no improvement in
functional status, which is inconsistent with the rationale for home
visits. How could mortality and admissions to a nursing home be reduced
without an effect on functional status? Unfortunately, only four
studies contributed to this analysis, confidence intervals were wide,
and Elkan et al did not contact investigators to obtain additional
data. Future reviewers should collaborate with original investigators
to define the exact characteristics of interventions, obtain data on
implementation and adherence, and standardise outcome measures and
quality assessment. Several additional trials which have been published
recently will increase the power of their analyses. The results are
likely to generate useful hypotheses, which should be addressed in
trials that are powered to examine effects across prespecified
interventions and subgroups of elderly people. Trials and meta-analyses
show that preventive home visits can work. The challenge now is to
tease out which components of the intervention are effective and which
populations are most likely to benefit.

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Meta-analysis of eight trials of effect of preventive home
visits on admission to long term institutional care. Data taken from
table 2. Elkan et al's classification of study population (general
elderly population or frail elderly) and mortality in control groups
are also shown
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Acknowledgments |
I am grateful to Andreas Stuck, John Beck, and Nicola Low for
helpful comments.
 |
Footnotes |
Competing interests: None declared.
The full version of this paper
appears on the BMJ's website
 |
References |
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© BMJ 2001