The Daily Courier

Seniors struggle to recover at home

- By RUTA VALAITIS and MAUREEN MARKLE-REID

Despite having diabetes and arthritis, Verne was a thriving independen­t 72-year-old who lived at home with his wife when he had a stroke.

He had excellent emergency care in the hospital and began his recovery there. But he didn’t adjust well after arriving home. He started to show signs of depression and was at risk of rehospital­ization.

Verne feared he would have another stroke as he waited for follow-up appointmen­ts with neurology, physiother­apy and speech pathology. He had difficulty rememberin­g to take his new medication­s and adapting to using a walker.

Transition­ing home from hospital is challengin­g for older adults with multiple chronic conditions. Home-care services are often not available or inadequate. And followup care from doctors or specialist­s is too often infrequent or involves juggling multiple appointmen­ts over long wait periods.

Add to this the challenge of managing complex health conditions and the risks for depression and recurring poor health and hospitaliz­ation are high.

Unfortunat­ely, Verne's experience is not uncommon.

The 2016 State of Seniors Health Care in Canada report from the Canadian Medical Associatio­n, highlights a key problem: our medicare system was establishe­d to deal largely with acute, episodic care for a relatively young population.

Today, our system struggles to care properly for patients managing multiple ongoing health issues. We know older adults with chronic conditions need more health services and have a higher risk of hospitaliz­ation compared to those with a single chronic condition.

Adults 65 years and older are the fastest growing age group in the country. In Ontario, 16.7 per cent, in B.C and Quebec 18.3 per cent, and in Nova Scotia 19.9 per cent of the population is 65 years or older.

Multiple chronic conditions among older adults are increasing. Approximat­ely 75-80 per cent of Canadian seniors report having one or more chronic condition, such as diabetes, asthma, arthritis, high blood pressure, mood disorder and chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease.

Like Verne, these patients face several challenges in managing their conditions.

A lack of care co-ordination amongst health profession­als combined with low health literacy gets in the way.

Their care is piecemeal and fragmented, with little focus on the patient and family as a whole.

Limited financial resources to cover the costs of supplies, additional care and transporta­tion also create barriers to self-management.

These seniors often experience loneliness. Their family caregivers often lack support. Managing multiple, often interactin­g medication­s is also difficult.

So what can be done? We asked seniors to find the answers.

As researcher­s with the Aging, Community and Health Research Unit at McMaster

University, we’re working with older adults with multiple chronic conditions and their family caregivers to promote optimal aging at home.

Community Assets Supporting Transition­s (CAST) is a new hospital-to-home transition­al care program in Sudbury, Burlington and Hamilton that aims to reduce depressive symptoms, improve patients' quality of life and self-management ability, and support family caregivers.

CAST is delivered by registered nurses who support patients transition­ing from hospital to home

over a six-month period through inhome visits, telephone follow-up and care co-ordination.

There's also a community-based diabetes self-management program in Ontario, Quebec and P.E.I. that was developed for older adults with diabetes and multiple chronic conditions. The program includes monthly wellness sessions, and a series of home visits with a registered nurse and a registered dietitian. They work as a team with staff and volunteers from seniors centres or YMCAs to deliver a health promotion program for participan­ts.

We’ve also been creating a new way of providing outpatient stroke rehabilita­tion services for older adults with stroke and multiple chronic conditions living in the community. We provide regular inhome visits for the patient and

monthly interprofe­ssional care conference­s for the providers. We also developed a new web-based app, MyST (My Stroke Team), to support communicat­ion and collaborat­ion among the interprofe­ssional stroke team.

Clearly, the status quo isn't meeting the needs of our aging population and fails to provide quality care for seniors. Creating innovative pilot projects to improve the transition from hospital to home will help us provide a better system that's both more efficient and costeffect­ive, and will improve the standard of care to seniors like Verne.

Ruta Valaitis and Maureen Markle-Reid are is a professors at the McMaster University School of Nursing and contributo­rs to the EvidenceNe­twork.ca, out of the University of Winnipeg.

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