Background: Little is known about what components geriatricians routinely incorporate into outpatient comprehensive geriatric assessments (CGAs).
Aims: This study explored what components of CGAs are routinely incorporated into geriatricians' letters and assessed their consistency with the Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) and a recently published survey of geriatricians.
Methods: We completed a manual content analysis, supplemented by qualitative thematic analysis, of 34 letters from five geriatricians, collected as part of the GOAL Trial.
Results: While more than 80% of letters included each of the key clinical domains described in the Medicare Benefits Schedule and survey of geriatricians, only 62% included advanced care planning and 47% mentioned immunisations. Forty-seven percent of letters included goal setting. Few letters showed evidence of multidisciplinary working. Issues identified by the geriatrician centred around the themes of advance care planning, symptom identification and management, medical comorbidities, strategies to support quality of life and interventions to manage frailty. Patient concerns identified in the letters were cognition and mood, declining function, future planning and symptom management.
Conclusions: Analysis of geriatricians' letters provides important and novel insights into usual CGA practice. The letters provide evidence of multidimensional assessments of physical, functional, social and psychological health, and most include use of standardised tools. However, less than 50% include evidence of goal setting or multidisciplinary working. The results allow consideration of how CGAs might be carried out in the outpatient setting, so that interventions focused on improving the quality and efficacy of this intervention can be implemented.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imj.16535 | DOI Listing |
Intern Med J
December 2024
Geriatric Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Background: Little is known about what components geriatricians routinely incorporate into outpatient comprehensive geriatric assessments (CGAs).
Aims: This study explored what components of CGAs are routinely incorporated into geriatricians' letters and assessed their consistency with the Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) and a recently published survey of geriatricians.
Methods: We completed a manual content analysis, supplemented by qualitative thematic analysis, of 34 letters from five geriatricians, collected as part of the GOAL Trial.
Clin Nutr
November 2024
Department of Statistics, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden; Department of Medical Sciences, Clinical Diabetology and Metabolism, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden; Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Division of Family Medicine and Primary Care, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Isr J Health Policy Res
October 2024
Division of Anesthesia, Intensive Care, and Pain Management, Tel-Aviv Medical Center, Tel- Aviv University, 6 Weizmann St, Tel-Aviv, 6423906, Israel.
This commentary examines the study "Frailty and Its Association with Long-Term Mortality Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults Aged 75 Years and Over" by Lewis et al. The retrospective cohort study utilized data from a primary healthcare provider in Israel to investigate frailty using the Frailty Index (FI) and its correlation with long-term mortality. Nearly half of the older adult cohort was identified as frail, with a strong association between higher frailty levels and increased mortality risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Geriatr Soc
October 2024
Geriatric Science Association, Izmir, Turkey.
World Neurosurg
June 2024
Sevil Yaser Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, MD. Electronic address:
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