Description
Geriatric Emergencies, 1st ed. 2019
A Case-Based Approach to Improving Acute Care
Coordinators: Lindquist Lee A., Dresden Scott M.
Language: EnglishSubjects for Geriatric Emergencies:
214 p. · 12.7x20.3 cm · Hardback
Description
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/li>Biography
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It is unknown how many older adults are hospitalized for reasons other than acute medical illness, such as functional decline, polypharmacy, progressive dementia, caregiver stress, or unstable living situation. These non-emergent conditions are rarely addressed during a typical ED visit due to lack of resources, significant patient volumes, and the need for rapid turnover of care spaces. The predominant management strategy of emergency physicians to handle these important but not imminently life-threatening geriatric issues is to recommend hospital admission.
Northwestern has pioneered the Geriatric Emergency Department through the creation of the Geriatric Emergency Department Innovation model (GEDI), with goals to prevent admissions for older adults by assessing and meeting their geriatric-specific, non-acute care needs in the ED. The GEDI model at Northwestern centers on a multi-disciplinary curriculum composed of clinical, didactic, and practical arms developed by emergency medicine and geriatrics educational experts.
In this title, we will present case studies of older adults seen in the Emergency Department through the GEDI model and discuss means of identifying/screening for, diagnosing, and treating geriatric syndromes seen in the emergent care of the older adult patient. In addition, there will be a set of concise ?take-home points? for each case study that will be easy to commit to memory and implement in clinical care of older adults.
As the number of seniors seeking emergent care will continue to increase, the ED setting must become responsive to geriatric-specific needs. This book will provide a variety of models detailing how to offer comprehensive, state-of-the-art, optimal care for managing the full range of geriatric syndromes that regularly present in the emergent care setting.
1. Growing Older in the Emergency Department
Authors: Lee A. Lindquist, MD MPH MBA and Paul A. Nelson, BArch
2. Components of an effective Geriatric Emergency Department
Author: Scott M. Dresden, MD, MS
3. Cognitive Impairment in the ED
Authors: Jill M Huded, MD and Todd I Smith, MD, FACP, FHM
4. Syncope in a rural emergency department setting
Authors: Lucy Morse, BS, MD & Lee A. Lindquist, MD, MPH, MBA
5. ER referrals and hospitalizations from Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Facilities
Author: Fernanda Heitor, MD
6. Can Home Visits Make a Difference to Emergency Department Visits? "I will just stop by his place on the way home: Who knew it would be a journey?"
Authors: Dwayne Dobschuetz, APRN, MSN and Katherine O’Brien, MD
7. Medication Errors in Aging Adults: A Case-Based Approach to Medication Management
Authors: Abbie Lyden, PharmD BCPS and Katherine Allen, PharmD
8. Pain, Opioid Use, and Palliative Care of Older Adults in the Emergency Department
Author: William P. Burns, MD
9. Acute Mental Status Changes and Over-the-Counter Medications in Older Adults
Author: Katherine M. Hunold, MD
10. Identifying fall risk in the Emergency Department
Author: Chirley M. Rodriguez, MD11. Capacity, Advance Care Planning, and Buying Time.
Author: Hashim Q. Zaidi, MD
Associate Professor of Medicine
Section Chief of Geriatrics
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
750 N. Lake Shore Drive, 10th Floor
Chicago, IL 60611
Scott Dresden, MD
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Department of Emergency Medicine
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
211 E. Ontario, Room 200
Chicago, IL 60611
Written by experts in geriatric medicine
Includes 11 case studies demonstrating the unique considerations of aging patients in the emergency room
Each chapter concludes with "take-home points"
Identifies solutions for challenging problems encountered commonly with older adult patients