Abstract
Eighty-four geriatirc ward patients were randomly assigned to groups targeted for outplacement planning or inpatient care. During the following year, half of the former were placed in community settings while nearly all of the latter remained in the hospital. Neither the physical health, level of selfcare, or psychiatric condition ratings of the two groups changed differentially over that time. However, the mean morale inventory score of the outplacement sample improved while that of the inpatient group remained static. Additional analyses were run between three groups — outplacement, planning subjects who were released, those who were not released, and inpatient planning men who were not released. These results confirmed those of the first analyses; the only significant difference appeared on the morale inventory, the patients who left showing more improvement than the other two groups. The results argue for an increased emphasis on outplacement programs among geriatric patients.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: