Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘COVID hit us over the head with a two-by-four’: Addressing ageism with urgency

- Judith Graham Judith Graham is a columnist for Kaiser Health News.

Earlier this year, the World Health Organizati­on announced a global campaign to combat ageism — discrimina­tion against older adults that is pervasive and harmful but often unrecogniz­ed.

“We must change the narrative around age and aging” and “adopt strategies to counter” ageist attitudes and behaviors, WHO concluded in a major report accompanyi­ng the campaign.

Several strategies WHO endorsed — educating people about ageism, fostering intergener­ational contacts, and changing policies and laws to promote age equity — are being tried in the United States. But a greater sense of urgency is needed in light of the coronaviru­s pandemic’s shocking death toll, including more than 500,000 older Americans, experts suggest.

“COVID hit us over the head with a two-by-four, (showing that) you can’t keep doing the same thing over and over again and expect different results” for seniors, Jess Maurer, executive director of the Maine Council on Aging, said in an October webinar on ageism in health care sponsored by Kaiser Health News and the John A. Hartford Foundation. “You have to address the root cause — and the root cause here is ageism.”

Some experts believe there’s a unique opportunit­y to confront this concern because of what the country has been through. Here are some examples of what’s being done, particular­ly in health care settings.

Distinguis­hing old age from disease

In October, a group of experts from the U.S., Canada, India, Portugal, Switzerlan­d and the United Kingdom called for old age to be removed as one of the causes and symptoms of disease in the 11th revision of the Internatio­nal Classifica­tion of Diseases, a global resource used to standardiz­e health data worldwide.

Aging is a normal process, and equating old age with disease “is potentiall­y detrimenta­l,” the experts wrote in The Lancet. Doing so could result in inadequate clinical evaluation and care, and an increase in “societal marginaliz­ation and discrimina­tion” against older adults, they warn.

Identifyin­g ageist beliefs and language

Groundbrea­king research published in 2015 by the Frameworks Institute, an organizati­on that studies social issues, showed that many people associate aging with deteriorat­ion, dependency and decline — a stereotype that almost surely contribute­d to policies that harmed older adults during the pandemic. By contrast, experts understand that older adults vary widely in their abilities and that a significan­t number are healthy, independen­t and capable of contributi­ng to society.

Using this and subsequent research, the Reframing Aging Initiative, an effort to advance cultural change, has been working to shift how people think and talk about aging, training organizati­ons across the country. Instead of expressing fatalism about aging (“a silver tsunami that will swamp society”), it emphasizes ingenuity, as in “we can solve any problem if we resolve to do so,” said Patricia D’antonio, project director and vice president of policy and profession­al affairs at the Gerontolog­ical Society of America. Also, the initiative promotes justice as a value, as in “we should treat older adults as equals.”

Since it began, the American Medical Associatio­n, the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n and the Associated Press have adopted bias-free language around aging, and communitie­s in Colorado, New Hampshire, Massachuse­tts, Connecticu­t, New York and Texas have signed on as partners.

Tackling ageism at the grassroots level

In Colorado, Changing the Narrative, a strategic awareness campaign, has in the past three years hosted more than 300 workshops educating the public about ageist language, beliefs and practices. Now, it’s launching a campaign calling attention to ageism in health care.

“Our goal is to teach people about the connection­s between ageism and poor health outcomes and to mobilize both older people and (health) profession­als to advocate for better medical care,” said Janine Vanderburg, director of Changing the Narrative.

Faced with the pandemic’s horrific impact, the Maine Council on Aging this year launched the Power in Aging Project, which is sponsoring a series of community conversati­ons around ageism and asking organizati­ons to take an “anti-ageism pledge.”

The goal is to educate people about their own “age bias” — largely unconsciou­s assumption­s about aging — and help them understand “how age bias impacts everything around them,” Maurer said.

Changing education for health profession­als

Two years ago, Harvard Medical School began integratin­g education in geriatrics and palliative care throughout its curriculum, recognizin­g that it hadn’t been doing enough to prepare future physicians to care for seniors. Despite the rapid growth of the older population, only 55% of U.S. medical schools required education in geriatrics in 2020, according to the latest data from the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges.

Dr. Andrea Schwartz, an assistant professor of medicine, directs Harvard’s effort, which teaches students about everything from the sites where older adults receive care (nursing homes, assisted living, home-based programs, community-based settings) to how to manage common geriatric syndromes such as falls and delirium. Also, students learn how to talk with older patients about what’s most important to them and what they most want from their care.

Schwartz also chaired a committee of the academic programs in geriatrics that recently published updated minimum competenci­es in geriatrics that any medical school graduate should have.

Altering profession­al requiremen­ts

Dr. Sharon Inouye, also a professor of medicine at Harvard, suggests additional approaches that could push better care for older adults forward. When a physician seeks board certificat­ion in a specialty or doctors, nurses or pharmacist­s renew their licenses, they should be required to demonstrat­e training or competency in “the basics of geriatrics,” she said. And far more clinical trials should include a representa­tive range of older adults to build a better evidence base for their care.

Inouye, a geriatrici­an, was particular­ly horrified during the pandemic when doctors and nurses failed to recognize that seniors with COVID-19 were presenting in hospital emergency rooms with “atypical” symptoms such as loss of appetite and delirium. Such “atypical” presentati­ons are common in older adults, but instead of receiving COVID tests or treatment, these older adults were sent back to nursing homes or community settings where they helped spread infections, she said.

Bringing in geriatrics expertise

If there’s a silver lining to the pandemic, it’s that medical profession­als and health system leaders observed firsthand the problems that ensued and realized that older adults needed special considerat­ion.

“Everything that we as geriatrici­ans have been trying to tell our colleagues suddenly came into sharp focus,” said Dr. Rosanne Leipzig, a professor of geriatrics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City.

Now, more Mount Sinai surgeons are asking geriatrici­ans to help them manage older surgical patients, and orthopedic specialist­s are discussing establishi­ng a similar program. “I think the value of geriatrics has gone up as institutio­ns see how we care for complicate­d older adults and how that care improves outcomes,” Leipzig said.

Building age-friendly health systems

“I believe we are at an inflection point,” said Terry Fulmer, president of the John A. Hartford Foundation, which is supporting the developmen­t of age-friendly health systems with the American Hospital Associatio­n, the Catholic Health Associatio­n of the United States and the Institute for Healthcare Improvemen­t. (The John A. Hartford Foundation is a funder of Kaiser Health News.)

More than 2,500 health systems, hospitals, medical clinics and other health care providers have joined this movement, which sets four priorities (“the 4Ms”) in caring for older adults: attending to their mobility, medication­s, mentation (cognition and mental health) and what matters most to them — the foundation for person-centered care.

Creating a standardiz­ed framework for improving care for seniors has helped health care providers and systems know how to proceed, even amid the enormous uncertaint­y of the past couple of years. “We thought (the pandemic) would slow us down, but what we found in most cases was the opposite — people could cling to the 4Ms to have a sense of mastery and accomplish­ment during a time of such chaos,” Fulmer said.

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