Worobec G, Brown M K
St. Peter's Hospital.
J Gerontol Nurs. 1997 Jun;23(6):23-8. doi: 10.3928/0098-9134-19970601-10.
Occasionally, elderly patients experience acute, episodic incidents of illness that result in dehydration or a high potential for dehydration (e.g., flu, diarrhea). At times, patients may be unable, or refuse, to take fluids orally. Enteral routes via a nasogastric tube or enteral stomach tube may also not be available. In the past, these patients often had to be transferred from home or long-term care facilities to an acute care hospital for intravenous therapy. A transfer of the acutely ill elderly patient to an acute care hospital is often very stressful to the patient and his/her family and is costly to the health care delivery system. Hypodermoclysis, the process of rehydrating a patient by providing isotonic fluids into the subcutaneous tissues over a short time period, provides an alternative method to deal with acute, short-term fluid deficit problems in the elderly. Hypodermoclysis therapy can be administered in a chronic care setting thus potentially decreasing the need to transfer the elderly client to an acute care hospital. The purpose of this study was to investigate the use of hypodermoclysis therapy in solving acute, or potentially acute fluid deficit problems, that were anticipated to be both reversible and short term in nature. This was carried out in an elderly population that resided in a 284-bed chronic care hospital in southern Ontario.