May/June 2021 Common Sense

Page 41

INTEREST GROUP REPORT PALLIATIVE CARE

Hospital Associated Disability: Is Hospital Admission Really the Safest Disposition for Our Elderly Patients? Diana Huynh, MD and Austin J. Causey, MD

A

re we helping our elderly patients who are “too unsafe for discharge” by keeping them in the hospital? Emergency medicine (EM) physicians know this dilemma all too well. Imagine the 90-year-old patient who presents from home after a neighbor calls 911. The patient arrives via EMS and explains that her neighbor was worried by the amount of time she was spending in the house. She says that after some discussion with her neighbor and EMS, she agreed to come to the ED for a “checkup.” The patient in your emergency department is frail and disheveled. She is ambulatory with a cane and lives alone. You complete a work up and find only that her urinalysis is equivocal for a UTI. You’re preparing to discharge the patient but worry, “is this frail and disheveled 90-yearold woman safe for discharge back to her home alone?” As EM physicians we have limited exposure to the patient experience after patients are admitted — hospitals can be dangerous places for the elderly. Hospital associated disability (HAD) is defined as loss of ability to complete one of the basic ADLs needed to live independently without assistance: bathing, dressing, toileting, eating, or transferring. Almost one third of hospitalized older adults are discharged with a new major functional disability.1 Nearly three in four elderly patients do not walk during their hospital stays.2 Older patients are also highly susceptible to delirium and it tends to persist for longer in the elderly. After leaving the hospital, geriatric populations have a 60-fold increase in their risk of developing more permanent disabilities3 and it is estimated only about one in three patients return to their pre-illness level of function.4 These are things to seriously consider when deciding whether to recommend hospital admission for elderly patients.

Of course HAD cannot be eliminated, especially for elderly patients that are admitted for catastrophic events such as stroke or myocardial infarction. Inpatient programs like acute care for elders (ACE) units and early mobility initiatives have been shown to reduce HAD,5 but perhaps as EM physicians, we can help prevent HAD by reducing “social” admissions. When deciding disposition for your elderly patients, be sure to involve them in medical decision making. Physicians are known to be less likely to involve older patients in medical decision making when compared with younger patients.6 If your patient has the ability to make an informed decision about whether or not they want to stay in the hospital, empower them to decide and create a plan that safely supports their decision.

Hospital associated disability (HAD) is defined as loss of ability to complete one of the basic ADLs needed to live independently without assistance: bathing, dressing, toileting, eating, or transferring.” References 1. Loyd, Christine, et al. “Prevalence of Hospital-Associated Disability in Older Adults: A MetaAnalysis.” Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, vol. 21, no. 4, 2020, doi:10.1016/j. jamda.2019.09.015. 2. Callen, Bonnie L, et al. “Frequency of Hallway Ambulation by Hospitalized Older Adults on Medical Units of an Academic Hospital.” Geriatric Nursing, vol. 25, no. 4, 2004, pp. 212–217., doi:10.1016/j. gerinurse.2004.06.016. 3. Reichardt, Lucienne A., et al. “Unravelling the Potential Mechanisms behind HospitalizationAssociated Disability in Older Patients; the Hospital-Associated Disability and Impact on Daily Life (Hospital-ADL) Cohort Study Protocol.” BMC Geriatrics, vol. 16, no. 1, 2016, doi:10.1186/s12877016-0232-3. 4. Boyd, Cynthia M., et al. “Recovery of Activities of Daily Living in Older Adults After Hospitalization for Acute Medical Illness.” Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, vol. 56, no. 12, 2008, pp. 2171–2179., doi:10.1111/j.1532-5415.2008.02023.x. 5. Ortiz-Alonso, Javier, et al. “Effect of a Simple Exercise Program on Hospitalization-Associated Disability in Older Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial.” Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, vol. 21, no. 4, 2020, doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2019.11.027. 6. Ben-Harush A, Shiovitz-Ezra S, Doron I, et al. Ageism among physicians, nurses, and social workers: findings from a qualitative study. Eur J Ageing. 2017;14(1):39-48.

COMMON SENSE MAY/JUNE 2021

41


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Resident Journal Review: Advances in the Use of Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography in the Evaluation of Coronary Artery Disease in the Emergency Department

16min
pages 74-77

AAEM/RSA Editor: The “Privilege” of Working in the COVID ICU

3min
page 73

What Keeps Me Up at Night

6min
pages 71-72

AAEM/RSA President: Passing the Baton: The Next Generation of AAEM/RSA

2min
pages 67-70

Critical Care Medicine: Vents, Cardiac Events, and Aerosolized Contaminants: Performing CPR on Vented COVID-19 Patients

5min
pages 53-54

Wellness: Bringing Wellness to Your Organization: Highlights from the AAEM Leadership Academy 2021

8min
pages 50-52

Operations Management: Ops Series: Lean Six Sigma

5min
pages 48-49

International: A Lot to Learn from Our Colleagues from AAEM

3min
page 47

AAEM Chapter Division Updates: California Chapter Division Update: CAL/AAEM Golden State Symposium

2min
pages 64-66

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion: Next Generation Leadership: A Conversation About Equity and Inclusion

9min
pages 45-46

Women in EM: Why I Decided to participate in a COVID-19 Vaccine Trial – A Reminder that Diversity in Medicine Cannot be an After-Thought

9min
pages 57-58

Young Physicians: Learning to Communicate in a Pandemic

2min
pages 59-60

Social EM & Population Health: Social EM Spotlight: Dr. Kraftin Schreyer – An Emergency Department Based Hepatitis A Vaccination Program: A Merge of Social Emergency Medicine and Emergency Medicine Operations

6min
pages 43-44

Palliative Care: A View from the Middle of My Mid-Career Fellowship

3min
page 42

Palliative Care: Hospital Associated Disability: Is Hospital Admission Really the Safest Disposition for Our Elderly Patients?

3min
page 41

Speaker Development Group

13min
pages 38-40

27th Annual Scientific Assembly (AAEM21) Feature

8min
pages 31-37

Traumatic Urinary Catheter Insertion: A Case Presentation

2min
page 30

Just Another Overnight

8min
pages 28-29

Careerealism: It’s Not Your Imagination: No Jobs Anywhere

5min
pages 26-27

2021 AAEM Board of Directors Election Candidate Statements

20min
pages 15-24

From the Editor’s Desk: Diversity of Priorities and Talents

7min
pages 6-7

President’s Message: What Does Leadership Look Like? (Part 2

13min
pages 3-5

Legislators in the News: HB 2622: An Interview with Amish M. Shah, MD MPH FAAEM

10min
pages 9-12

Letter to the Editor: COVID Reimagined

1min
page 8
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.