scholarly journals A Framework Illustrating Care-Seeking Among Older Adults in a Hospital Emergency Department

2017 ◽  
Vol 58 (5) ◽  
pp. 942-952 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara J Lutz ◽  
Allyson G Hall ◽  
Sean B Vanhille ◽  
Andrea L Jones ◽  
Jessica R Schumacher ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
pp. 196-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duygu Keskin Gokcelli ◽  
Pınar Tosun Tasar ◽  
Nur Ozge Akcam ◽  
Sevnaz Sahin ◽  
Funda Karbek Akarca ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 1016-1016
Author(s):  
Laura Wallace ◽  
Karen Hirschman ◽  
Mary Naylor ◽  
Liming Huang ◽  
Pamela Cacchione

Abstract Hearing, vision, and dual (combined hearing and vision) sensory impairments (HI, VI, and DSI) are common in older adults and associated with adverse health outcomes. However, it is not clear how sensory impairments impact healthcare utilization in older adults. This study aims to examine hospital, emergency department (ED), and home health care use amongst adults 65 and older diagnosed with HI, VI, and DSI in an urban academic health system. This secondary analysis (N=45,000) used a limited data subset of older adult primary care patients’ EHR data from a parent study examining medical complexity, healthcare use, and social vulnerability. Using logistic regression and controlling for participant demographics and comorbidities, results show HI, VI, and DSI increase the likelihood of having an ED visit (OR 1.29, p<.0001; OR 1.28, p=0.0011; OR 1.50, p=.0328, respectively) and a home health episode (hearing OR 1.41, p<.0001; vision OR 1.42, p=.0002) compared to those without sensory impairment (SI). No significant difference was found in hospital use and home health use for DSI. This is the first known study to examine ED use for older adults with VI and DSI, and home health use for older adults with SI in the US. Findings suggest older adults with SI have greater utilization and dependence on healthcare services. Older adults with SI may benefit from outpatient assessments and interventions to mitigate risks of ED use. Findings also support research into the drivers of healthcare use amongst this population, financial implications, and intervention development to prevent avoidable healthcare use.


Author(s):  
Thierry Morineau ◽  
Mounia Djenidi-Delfour ◽  
Fabrice Arnault

This study describes the concept of affordance-based procedure and its implementation in a triage station in a hospital emergency department. Rather than seeking to increase operators’ adherence to procedures, an affordance-based procedure (1) aims to induce task steps using affordances that also (2) support degrees of freedom for action. The design of this procedure was guided by the application of an extended version of cognitive work analysis, named “heuristic cognitive work analysis.” This design process produced a new procedural document: a reception card. Ten months after its implementation, a qualitative evaluation with 10 triage nurses shows that the reception card is viewed as supporting coordination between the different nurses’ tasks and providing an external memory to cope with frequent interruptions during high patient inflow, even though the document is used for convenience and with unexpected and partial uses of its items. The document assessed also afforded emerging benefits, that is, acceleration of ambulance release, higher level of confidentiality, assistance for staff hand-overs. Finally, novice triage nurses are particularly sensitive to the benefits brought by this affordance-based procedure.


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