Health and Social Care Interventions in the 80 years Old and Over Population: An Evidence and Gap Map
Rebecca Abbott, Alison Bethel, Jo Thompson Coon, Morwenna Rogers, Rebecca Whear, Noreen Orr, Ruth Garside, Victoria A. Goodwin, Aseel Mahmoud, Ilianna Lourida, Debbie CheesemanBackground
Worldwide, the population is ageing. As the population ages, so does the prevalence of age-related diseases such as arthritis, osteoporosis, diabetes, hypertension, cancer and dementia, increasing the demand on health and social care services. The evidence underpinning treatments and interventions for most health and social care issues is derived from populations younger than 80 years of age because this age group is often excluded from taking part in clinical trials. This raises concerns that many established treatments may not be the most suitable or effective approach for those aged 80 years or more.
Objectives
Our aim was to produce an interactive evidence and gap map to provide an overview of the volume, diversity and nature of the evidence on health and social care interventions that target adults over 80 years of age.
Search Methods
We searched 18 databases: Medline, PsycINFO, HMIC, Social Policy and Practice, Ageline, CINAHL Complete, ASSIA, PQDT; Epistemonikos; Cochrane, CENTRAL, Campbell systematic reviews, Web of Science, SCI, SSCI, AHCI, CPCI-S, CPCI-SSH, and ESCI (in October 2022). Searches were updated in July 2024. Forward and backward citation searching was also undertaken in 2024 using CiteSearch, Scopus and Google Scholar.
Selection Criteria
We included systematic reviews, randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and primary qualitative studies in the map that focused on the effectiveness and/or experience of any health or social care interventions for adults aged 80 years or more. All studies were independently screened for eligibility by two people at both title/abstract and full text stages.
Data Collection and Analysis
Interventions were categorised in line with the WHO definition of five domains that facilitate healthy ageing: building and maintaining intrinsic capacity, health services models and approaches, enabling environments and technologies, building and maintaining relationships and learning, growing and making decisions. Interventions could cut across multiple domains. The data extraction tool was developed on EPPI reviewer and was modified and tested through piloting and revising by the core team. The tool was informed by the research question and the structure of the map. As well as extracting data on population characteristics, intervention domain and sub-categories, we extracted additional data to enable filters, such as specific health conditions, and equity characteristics. Standardised tools were used to assess study quality for all studies: AMSTAR-2 for systematic reviews; Cochrane Risk of Bias tool (version 1) for RCTs; and the Wallace criteria for primary qualitative studies. Data extraction and quality appraisal were extracted by one person and checked by a second.
Main Results
We included 172 studies: 36 systematic reviews, 120 RCTs and 16 primary qualitative studies. Most of the systematic reviews were assessed as low or very low quality with only five assessed as moderate to high quality. Similarly, most of the RCTs were assessed to be at medium to high risk of bias, with only 27 RCTs assessed with an overall low risk of bias. Ten of the qualitative studies were assessed as high quality. Over a third of the studies (n = 67) in the map have been published since 2020. The majority of the evidence, over 90% (n = 157/172), was focused within the domain of
Authors’ Conclusions
As the worldwide population continues to age, it is increasingly important that we have evidence of appropriate effective interventions for those who have reached their 80s, 90s and beyond, a group often left out of trials. This evidence and gap map shows that currently there is a clear bias towards interventions orientated around a biomedical view of health focused on intrinsic capacity, and relatively little on the wider functional and psychosocial aspect of health, or on enabling environments, such as adaptations to health and care services, or models of care. There is also a clear need for more research to understand the experiences and preferences of interventions from adults aged 80 years or more.