Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Let’s make our hospitals more senior friendly

Dr. George Heckman and Dr. Paul Hebert say the lack of systematic assessment leaves us vulnerable as we get older.

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Canadians are living longer. Unfortunat­ely, our hospitals aren’t ready for them.

Canadians over 65 years old use over 40 per cent of hospital services, a demand that continues to rise. As they age, Canadians hope to stay at home as long as possible. If hospitaliz­ation is required, they should expect to go home quickly and safely afterwards. Yet many spend weeks to months in a hospital bed, acquiring new health problems and disabiliti­es, only to find themselves among the more than 300,000 Canadians living in nursing homes.

If hospitals are meant for getting well, why does this happen?

Our health-care system was designed in the 1950s and focused on hospitals. Back then, it was about unexpected emergencie­s, like pneumonia or injuries. Conditions like heart attacks had few beneficial treatments, so most patients did not survive very long.

Today, advances in medical science and public health mean that more people survive with conditions that would have killed their grandparen­ts. Conditions that can be treated but not cured are called chronic diseases. The biggest risk factor for chronic diseases is aging. As Canadians get older, they usually acquire not just one but many chronic diseases.

Many older Canadians also develop other age-related problems such as dementia, making simple everyday tasks more difficult. Many lose muscle strength, becoming less active and more disabled.

Over time, the burden of these problems grows, and affected persons become increasing­ly vulnerable. Simple health challenges like influenza, nothing more than a nuisance to young people, will incapacita­te or kill a vulnerable older person. This vulnerabil­ity is called frailty. So what can be done? First, hospitals need to identify vulnerable patients with complex needs so that they can quickly address and minimize complicati­ons. Detection requires that the right informatio­n be collected efficientl­y and reliably at the right time.

Ideally, informatio­n about complex needs and frailty should be identified early, in all health-care settings, using a common approach. Doing so would mean that important informatio­n can be gathered and acted upon even before a hospitaliz­ation. Most of the pieces for this approach are in place in Canada, but not in hospitals.

Yet knowing who’s at risk ensures that patients with mobility issues do not stay bedridden a minute longer than needed. It means that patients with dementia are regularly oriented to place and time and maintained on a stable daily routine. It means aggressive deprescrib­ing programs to get rid of harmful or useless medication­s. It also means a more efficient health-care system.

An internatio­nal not-forprofit group of researcher­s called interrai has carefully designed and studied instrument­s for just this purpose. Its assessment tools are already used in home care, nursing homes and mental health settings across Canada. Unfortunat­ely, they are not used yet in primary care and hospitals, where measuring frailty is typically an afterthoug­ht, if done at all.

Along with our colleagues, we recently studied the interrai Hospital Suite in 10 Canadian hospitals on over 5,000 older adults, supported by the Canadian Frailty Network. The instrument­s were easy to use and were able to reliably predict, within 24 hours of hospitaliz­ation, which older patients would develop complicati­ons in hospital, which ones were at risk of a long hospital stay and which ones were at risk of ending up in a nursing home.

Efforts are already under way to make our hospitals senior friendly, but the lack of systematic assessment in the system overall leaves us all vulnerable as we age. By the time frail patients need hospital care, it is often too late to address their complex needs.

Reliable informatio­n is a fundamenta­l requiremen­t to make our health-care system and especially our hospitals senior friendly, allowing better targeting of programs to respond to needs along the entire trajectory of life. Heckman is the Schlegel Research Chair in Geriatric Medicine and an associate professor at the University of Waterloo, and an assistant clinical professor of medicine at Mcmaster University. Hebert is a senior scientist at the Centre de recherche du Centre hospitalie­r de l’universite de Montreal (CRCHUM), and a full professor in the department of medicine of the Universite de Montreal.

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