Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Nurses send seniors home with help

New approach reduces admissions to hospitals

- By Carla K. Johnson

CHICAGO — When 86-year-old Carol Wittwer took a taxi to the emergency room, she expected to be admitted to the hospital. She didn’t anticipate being asked if she cooks for herself. If she has friends in her high-rise. Or if she could spell lunch backward.

“H-C-N-U-L,” she said, ruling out a type of confusion called delirium for the geriatrics-trained nurse who was posing the questions in a special wing of Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital’s emergency department

Wittwer’s care is part of a new approach to older patients as U.S. emergency rooms adapt to serve the complex needs of a graying population. That means asking more questions, asking them earlier and, when possible, avoiding a hospital stay for many older patients.

The surprising truth? Hospitals can make older patients sicker. Infections, incontinen­ce and weakening muscles from bed rest can cascade into delirium, frailty and death. More than 30 percent of older adults go home from a hospital stay with a minor or major health problem they picked up at the hospital.

But for an ER doctor, sending an elderly patient home sometimes feels risky.

“The doctors are not comfortabl­e sending you home unless you’re safe,” said Northweste­rn Medicine’s Dwayne Dobschuetz, a nurse practition­er who started making house calls by bicycle a year ago for the health system’s geriatrics

department. “It’s easier to admit older patients than to send them home.”

One of his patients, Marvin Shimp, 87, has lost much of his vision to macular degenerati­on, but lives independen­tly. Dobschuetz helps him stay out of the hospital with regular visits to check vitals and answer questions.

“He becomes quite a helper,” Shimp said.

Emergency rooms have been called the hospital’s front door, so that’s where reformers are starting.

“The emergency department is not designed with older adults in mind,” said Dr. Scott Dresden, who heads the Geriatric Emergency Department Innovation­s program at Northweste­rn. “You’ve got really thin stretchers. You’ve got patients in the hallway. There’s mechanical noise all around.”

Early research at Northweste­rn and other hospitals shows care from geriatrics-trained nurses in the ER can reduce the chances of a hospital stay after a patient’s emergency visit and for a month afterward.

About 100 hospitals in the United States have opened geriatric emergency department­s or trained ER teams in geriatrics care.

 ?? Teresa Crawford The Associated Press ?? Nurse practition­er Dwayne Dobschuetz, left, visits patient Marvin Shimp at Shimp’s home Jan. 10 in Chicago.
Teresa Crawford The Associated Press Nurse practition­er Dwayne Dobschuetz, left, visits patient Marvin Shimp at Shimp’s home Jan. 10 in Chicago.

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