Preventing Functional Decline Among Hospitalized Older Adults to Increase Discharges to Home

2010 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 100
Author(s):  
Sonia Lee ◽  
Beth Staffileno ◽  
Louis Fogg
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Tay ◽  
Melvin Chua ◽  
Yew Yoong Ding

Abstract Background: Readmission in older adults is typically complex with multiple contributing factors. We aim to examine how two prevalent and potentially modifiable geriatric conditions – depressive symptoms and malnutrition – relate to other geriatric syndromes and 30-day readmission in hospitalized older adults. Methods: Consecutive admissions of patients >65 years to a general medical department were recruited over 15 months. Patients were screened for depression, malnutrition, delirium, cognitive impairment, and frailty at admission. Medical records were reviewed for intermediary events including poor oral intake and functional decline during hospitalization. Unplanned readmission within 30-days of discharge was tracked through the hospital’s electronic health records and follow-up telephone interviews. We use directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) to depict the relationship of depressive symptoms and malnutrition with geriatric syndromes that constitute covariates of interest and 30-day readmission outcome. Multiple logistic regression was performed for the independent associations of depressive symptoms and malnutrition with 30-day readmission, adjusting for variables based on DAG-identified minimal adjustment set. Results: We recruited 1619 consecutive admissions, with mean age 76.4 (7.9) years and 51.3% females. 30-day readmission occurred in 331 (22.0%) patients. Depressive symptoms (OR 1.55, 95% CI 1.15-2.07), malnutrition (OR 1.59, 95% CI 1.14-2.23), higher comorbidity burden, hospitalization in the one-year preceding index admission, frailty, delirium, as well as functional decline and poor oral intake during the index admission, were more commonly observed among patients who were readmitted within 30 days of discharge (P<0.05). Patients with active depressive symptoms were significantly more likely to be frail (OR=1.62, 95% CI 1.22-2.16), had poor oral intake (OR=1.35, 95% CI 1.02-1.79) and functional decline during admission (OR=1.58, 95% CI 1.11-2.23). Malnutrition at admission was significantly associated with frailty, delirium, cognitive impairment and poor oral intake during hospitalization (P<0.05). In minimal adjustment set identified by DAG, depressive symptoms (OR=1.38, 95% CI 1.02-1.86) remained significantly associated with 30-day readmission. The association of malnutrition with 30-day readmission was attenuated after adjusting for age, ethnicity and depressive symptoms in the minimal adjustment set (OR=1.40, 95% CI 0.99-1.98, P=0.06). Conclusion: The observed causal associations support screening and targeted interventions for depressive symptoms and malnutrition during admission and in the post-acute period.


2012 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 272-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie Boltz ◽  
Barbara Resnick ◽  
Elizabeth Capezuti ◽  
Joseph Shuluk ◽  
Michelle Secic

2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 664-666 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan J. Baztán ◽  
María De la Puente ◽  
Alberto Socorro

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S336-S337
Author(s):  
Leighanne Jarvis ◽  
Sarah Moninger ◽  
Chandra Throckmorton ◽  
Juliessa M Pavon ◽  
Kevin Caves

Abstract Health and fitness are contributing factors to physical resilience, or the ability to resist or recover from functional decline following health stressors. Accelerometer based activity monitors have been used in both the in-patient and outpatient setting to monitor mobility. While using sensors to track mobility is increasing, most clinical settings rely on patient reported outcomes. These measures often under or overestimate movement. The lack of a clinically meaningful way to measure mobility in the in-patient setting is a barrier to improving the mobility of hospitalized individuals. This is especially important when considering that over one-third of hospitalized older adults are discharged with a major new functional disability in performing activities of daily living. Our goal was to automatically determine if the subject is laying, reclining, sitting, standing, and walking to better reflect actual activity. Other platforms and studies indicate the ability to determine a difference in activity vs. inactivity or laying and reclining vs. standing and walking, but not all five phases of movement defined here. The aim of this study was to use accelerometer data to train a machine learning algorithm to automatically classify the postural changes (i.e. laying, reclining, sitting, standing, and walking). Preliminary results demonstrate that our trained algorithm is overall 95% accurate in determining each position from unlabeled data from the subject population. Additionally, this algorithm will be applied to in-patient hospitalized older adults for tracking of positions throughout the day.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 298-311
Author(s):  
Jeannine Therese Moreau ◽  
Trudy Rudge

Purpose This paper examines how certain care values permeate, legitimize and authorize hospitalized-older-adults’ care, technologies and practices. The purpose of this paper is to expose how values are not benign but operate discursively establishing “orders of worth” with significant effect on the ethics of the care-setting. Design/methodology/approach The paper draws from a discursive ethnography to see “up close” on a surgical unit how values influence nurse/older-adult-patient care occasions in the domain of older-adults and functional decline. Data are from participant observations, conversations, interviews, chart reviews and reviewed literature. Foucauldian discursive analytics rendered values recognizable and analyzable as discursive practices. Discourse is a social practice of knowledge production constituting and giving meaning to what it represents. Findings Analysis reveals how care values inhere discourses like measurement, efficiency, economics, risk and functional decline (loss of capacity for independent living) pervading care technologies and practices, subjugating older adults’ bodies to techniques, turning older persons into measurable objects of knowledge. These values determine social conditions of worth, objectifying, calculating, normalizing and homogenizing what it means to be old, ill and in hospital. Originality/value Seven older adult patients and attendant nurses were followed for their entire hospitalization. The ethnography renders visible how care values as discursive practices rationalize the social order and operations of everyday care. Analytic outcomes offer insights of how dominant care values enabled care technologies and practices to govern hospitalized-older-adults as a population to be ordered, managed and controlled, eliding possibilities of engaging humanistic patient-centered care.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 919-919
Author(s):  
Amos Rogozinski ◽  
Anna Zisberg

Abstract Inadequate food intake is common among hospitalized older adults and is linked to negative hospitalization outcomes, including functional decline and mortality. Depression is a well-established risk factor in inadequate food intake in the community but its role in food consumption during hospitalization is poorly studied. To examine the associations between depressive symptoms, appetite and the quantity of food consumed by older inpatients, we conducted a secondary data analysis of 724 hospitalized adults aged 69 to 95 using a prospective cohort dataset: Hospitalization Process Effects on Functional Outcomes and Recovery. Depression was evaluated with Tucker’s Short Zung Instrument at time of admission. Food intake and appetite were examined daily for three consecutive days, using self-reports of food consumed at breakfast, lunch and supper, based on the nDay Express Questionnaire. Approximately 40% of respondents reported eating half or less than half of each meal. The risk of depression was prevalent among a third of respondents, 54% of whom were identified at high risk of depression. The association between depression and inadequate food intake was found to be negative [F(2,716)=9.00 ,p=0.000 ,η2=0.025]. Low appetite was significantly linked to reduced food consumption [β=-0.39, t=-12.06, p=0.000] and made a considerable contribution to the explained variance of food consumed [F-change (1,717)=145.41 , p=0.000]. Finally, decreased appetite partially mediated the association between depressive symptoms and food intake during hospitalization (B=-0.001, UCI=-0.001; LCI=-0.002). These findings contribute to the understanding of inadequate food intake during hospitalization and indicate the importance of screening for depression among hospitalized older adults.


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