scholarly journals Older Persons' Preferences for Home vs Hospital Care in the Treatment of Acute Illness

2000 ◽  
Vol 160 (10) ◽  
pp. 1501 ◽  
Author(s):  
Terri R. Fried ◽  
Carol van Doorn ◽  
John R. O'Leary ◽  
Mary E. Tinetti ◽  
Margaret A. Drickamer
Author(s):  
Thainara Araujo Franklin ◽  
Hemilena Carmo Da Silva Santos ◽  
Julival Andrade Santos Junior ◽  
Alba Benemérita Alves Vilela

Introdução: O RISCO DE QUEDA EM IDOSOS É UM DOS GRAVES PROBLEMAS DE SAÚDE PÚBLICA DEVIDO À ALTA PREVALÊNCIA, AS COMPLICAÇÕES E AOS ALTOS CUSTOS PARA OS SERVIÇOS DE SAÚDE. Objetivo: ANALISAR AS CARACTERÍSTICAS DO ATENDIMENTO DO SAMU AOS IDOSOS ENVOLVIDOS EM QUEDA NO ANO DE 2013. Métodos: ESTE É UM ESTUDO DESCRITIVO, RETROSPECTIVO, DE ANÁLISE DOCUMENTAL, COM ABORDAGEM QUANTITATIVA, DESENVOLVIDO NO SAMU NA CIDADE DE JEQUIÉ/BA. Resultados: A AMOSTRA FOI CONSTITUÍDA POR 183 IDOSOS VÍTIMAS DE QUEDA, COM IDADES A PARTIR DE 60 ANOS. MAIOR NÚMERO DE QUEDAS NAS MULHERES 68,3%, ENQUANTO NOS HOMENS FORAM 32,7%. A MAIORIA DAS QUEDAS OCORREU DA PRÓPRIA ALTURA, CORRESPONDENDO A 85,8%. QUANTO A IDADE, OS IDOSOS COM 80 ANOS OU MAIS SOFRERAM MAIS QUEDAS 43,7%. Conclusão: OS RESULTADOS APONTAM PARA UMA NECESSIDADE DE NOVAS PESQUISAS REFERENTES AO SERVIÇO PRÉ-HOSPITALAR COM RELAÇÃO AO ATENDIMENTO AO IDOSO.


Author(s):  
Berit Forsman ◽  
Ann Svensson

The aim of this paper is to describe frail older persons’ experiences of hospital care of information and participation when being an inpatient at a hospital. A qualitative method was used. Data were collected at the hospital from 20 interviews with frail older patients, together with observations in the environment at the hospital ward. A content analysis was performed. Patients experienced not receiving information about their care and rehabilitation, or receiving such information in noisy surroundings. They experienced situations of misunderstanding related to their medication, which indicates the need for appropriate discharge calls for frail older patients. They expressed feelings of distress concerning the future, caused by hasty admissions or relatives’ problems to handle the situation. The results highlight the need to receive appropriate information and to participate in decision-making. The level of health literacy should be taken notice of when giving information, using peaceful and quiet environments when informing frail older persons. Person-centered care should be recognized to a greater extent in order for healthcare professionals to give information to frail older people in a health literacy-friendly way. This might make it easier for frail older persons to participate in a partnership in care.


2006 ◽  
Vol 21 (12) ◽  
pp. 1276-1281 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharon K. Inouye ◽  
Ying Zhang ◽  
Ling Han ◽  
Linda Leo-Summers ◽  
Richard Jones ◽  
...  

1999 ◽  
Vol 107 (4) ◽  
pp. 317-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Terri R Fried ◽  
Carol van Doorn ◽  
John R O’Leary ◽  
Mary E Tinetti ◽  
Margaret A Drickamer
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 31 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Mamo

Abstract Work as a private primary health care practitioner with a special interest in older persons has been a rollercoaster ride over the course of the pandemic with the need to improvise, provide a wider form of care and an inordinate amount of role changing. The initial recommendation was to stay away from any possible cases which may have remotely resembled COVID with a view to keeping physicians and their practice safe. This message was unheard after the start of the second wave as the health services struggled to cope, testing became ever more accessible and patients who did develop COVID-19 needed someone to care for them when state services were overstretched. Meanwhile, the availability of all forms of specialist care grew ever scarcer in the community and increasingly caregivers such as myself realised that boundaries were now blurred under such circumstances. As hospital wards became taken up with exclusively COVID-19 patients, other hospital care delivery became on an urgent only basis and this had an effect on care in the community for patients living with chronic diseases. Physicians such as myself became ever more involved in caring for persons with mental illness and with the plethora of anxiety prevalent in a community burdened with a pandemic, an overabundance of morbid media coverage and social media feeding on fear and doubt.


1998 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 522-527 ◽  
Author(s):  
Terri R. Fried ◽  
Carol Doorn ◽  
Mary E. Tinetti ◽  
Margaret A. Drickamer
Keyword(s):  

2012 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 62-66
Author(s):  
Loren Nicole Torres ◽  
Steve Blanchard

Type II diabetes has become a topic of overwhelming interest in our society.  Using the National Hospital Discharge Survey (NHDS) from 2007, we examine diabetes in relation to hospital care.  The NHDS includes a sample of persons discharged with the diagnosis of diabetes.  The sample size is approximately 36,000 persons.  We filter the sample from the NHDS aggregate with the ICD-9-CM codes: 250.00 and/or 250.02.  Our study focuses on the length of days of care in the hospital as our dependent variable and in relation to our predictive variables: sex, age, marital status, method of payment and type of admission.  We examine this data by conducting descriptive, explanatory and predictive analyses.  The latter set of analyses is by linear and by logistic regression.  Our hypotheses are that women, persons who are older, persons admitted by emergency, and persons for whom the payment is public are more likely to have a longer stay in the hospital than those who do not fit these criteria.  We found, for example, that, within 95% confidence intervals, women who are single, older, admitted as emergent, and for whom payment is public are more likely to have a longer length of stay than men with similar characteristics.  The significance of this study is that it enables hospitals to better prepare for the care of individuals admitted with the diagnosis of type II diabetes.


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