Ellis Graham, Marshall Trudi, Ritchie Claire
Medicine for the Elderly, Monklands Hospital, Airdrie, Scotland, UK.
Kirklands Hospital, Bothwell, Scotland, UK.
Clin Interv Aging. 2014 Nov 24;9:2033-43. doi: 10.2147/CIA.S29662. eCollection 2014.
Changing global demography is resulting in older people presenting to emergency departments (EDs) in greater numbers than ever before. They present with greater urgency and are more likely to be admitted to hospital or re-attend and utilize greater resources. They experience longer waits for care and are less likely to be satisfied with their experiences. Not only that, but older people suffer poorer health outcomes after ED attendance, with higher mortality rates and greater dependence in activities of daily living or rates of admission to nursing homes. Older people's assessment and management in the ED can be complex, time consuming, and require specialist skills. The interplay of multiple comorbidities and functional decline result in the complex state of frailty that can predispose to poor health outcomes and greater care needs. Older people with frailty may present to services in an atypical fashion requiring detailed, multidimensional, and increasingly multidisciplinary care to provide the correct diagnosis and management as well as appropriate placement for ongoing care or admission avoidance. Specific challenges such as delirium, functional decline, or carer strain need to be screened for and managed appropriately. Identifying patients with specific frailty syndromes can be critical to identifying those at highest risk of poor outcomes and most likely to benefit from further specialist interventions. Models of care are evolving that aim to deliver multidimensional assessment and management by multidisciplinary specialist care teams (comprehensive geriatric assessment). Increasingly, these models are demonstrating improved outcomes, including admission avoidance or reduced death and dependence. Delivering this in the ED is an evolving area of practice that adapts the principles of geriatric medicine for the urgent-care environment.
全球人口结构的变化使得前往急诊科(ED)的老年人数量比以往任何时候都多。他们就诊时病情更为紧急,更有可能住院、再次就诊并占用更多资源。他们等待治疗的时间更长,对就医体验的满意度也更低。不仅如此,老年人在急诊科就诊后健康状况更差,死亡率更高,在日常生活活动中的依赖性更强,或者入住养老院的比例更高。在急诊科对老年人进行评估和管理可能很复杂、耗时,且需要专业技能。多种合并症和功能衰退的相互作用导致了虚弱的复杂状态,这可能使健康状况不佳和护理需求增加。虚弱的老年人可能以非典型方式就诊,需要详细、多维度且越来越多学科的护理,以提供正确的诊断和管理,以及适当的持续护理安排或避免住院。需要对诸如谵妄、功能衰退或照顾者压力等特定挑战进行筛查和适当管理。识别患有特定虚弱综合征的患者对于确定那些预后最差且最有可能从进一步专科干预中受益的人至关重要。护理模式正在不断发展,旨在由多学科专科护理团队进行多维度评估和管理(综合老年评估)。这些模式越来越多地显示出改善的结果,包括避免住院或降低死亡和依赖性。在急诊科实施这一模式是一个不断发展的实践领域,它将老年医学的原则应用于紧急护理环境。