Contextualizing the Positive Effects of the Well Elderly 2 Trial: A Response to Schelly and Ohl (2019).
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Abstract
A recent reanalysis of data from the Well Elderly (WE) 2 study purportedly indicated that the intervention did not achieve clinically meaningful or statistically significant effects; this article addresses these criticisms.To contextualize the WE 2 study as targeting a nonclinical population and demonstrate that the intervention produced substantively important, statistically significant effects.Secondary analysis of WE 2 intervention-based pre-post change scores.The original trial occurred primarily in senior centers and senior housing facilities in greater Los Angeles.Independent-living older adults (N = 324) who were assessed before and after intervention.The WE intervention, a version of the Lifestyle Redesign® (LR) approach, was administered by occupational therapists over 6 mo by means of group and individual sessions.The 36-item Short Form Health Survey, the Life Satisfaction Index-Z, and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale.The WE intervention was associated with statistically significant improvement on 10 of 12 outcome variables that were examined.Because the WE intervention was hypothesized to reduce age-related decline and followed a population-oriented approach, the expectation that average results would be clinically meaningful was inappropriate. The intervention produced positive effects across a wide array of outcome domains. In settings in which clinical meaningfulness is an appropriate index of intervention outcomes, evidence suggests that LR produces effects that are clinically meaningful. As an evidence-based intervention, LR should be considered useful both in population-oriented contexts and in addressing discrete health conditions.Valid analyses demonstrate that the positive experimental effects of the WE 2 study are, in fact, genuine and cost-effective, and LR in clinically oriented contexts has produced statistically significant, clinically meaningful results. Clearly and accurately representing the evidence base of occupational therapy in prevention and chronic care is of critical importance to advance the field as a whole.
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| Authors | Pyatak, Elizabeth A;Carlson, Mike;Vigen, Cheryl L P;Blanchard, Jeanine;Niemiec, Stacey Schepens;Sideris, John;Baranek, Grace T; |
| Journal | the american journal of occupational therapy : official publication of the american occupational therapy association |
| Year | Year not found |
| DOI |
10.5014/ajot.2019.038752
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