Making hospitals safer for older adults: updating quality metrics by understanding hospital-acquired delirium and its link to falls.

Perm J

Quality and Patient Safety Consultant for Patient Care Services for Kaiser Permanente Southern California in Pasadena.

Published: August 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hospitalized geriatric patients have different medical care needs compared to younger adults due to their decreased reserve capacity, making them more susceptible to issues like delirium and falls.
  • Geriatric syndromes can lead to longer hospital stays, higher readmission rates, and worse health outcomes; however, delirium can often be prevented by addressing known risk factors.
  • The article suggests creating quality metrics tailored for older adults to minimize geriatric syndromes and improve overall care, particularly emphasizing the prevention of delirium to potentially decrease falls.

Article Abstract

The medical care of hospitalized geriatric patients must differ from the care of younger adults. Because of reduced "reserve capacity," hospitalized older adults are at high risk of development of geriatric syndromes such as delirium and falls. Geriatric syndromes often lead to functional decline and dependence. Patients who experience geriatric syndromes in the hospital are more likely to have a longer length of stay, higher risk of readmissions, and worse medical outcomes. Incident delirium in hospitalized geriatric patients has been shown to be preventable by intervening in established risk factors. Prevention of hospital-related falls has not been consistently demonstrated. Analysis from Kaiser Permanente data demonstrated a correlation with delirium and hospital-related falls. We propose that age-specific quality metrics should be made to reduce the risk of the development of geriatric syndromes in hospitalized older adults. By preventing delirium, we believe that health care practitioners can reduce hospital-related falls in geriatric patients and improve the quality of care delivered to hospitalized older adults. An illustrative fictional case study is presented.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3854806PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7812/TPP/13-065DOI Listing

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