| 
Your Graying
Patients
Complex Needs of Older Patients Demand New
Skills
by Theresa Defino
Theresa Defino s a writer for Physicians Practice
The
oldest patient in Mary E. Frank’s practice is 102 years old,
and the Rohnert Park, Calif.-based family physician considers rendering
medical care “the easy part of the deal” when it comes
to treating a growing population of aging patients.
These patients “need two levels
of care,” she says. “They need medical care and a lot
of supportive care. They don’t so much want a cure or a fix
for their problem but they want someone to talk to about the problem
— whether it is osteoarthritis or social isolation.”
Frank, board chair and former president
of the American Academy of Family Physicians, knows the impact of
older patients on physicians and the health care system is only
going to grow with time. The U.S. Census bureau estimates that by
2030, 70 million Americans — one in five —will be age
65 and older. That’s double the number in 2000.
Dr. Theron Pettit, an internist at Melbourne
Internal Medicine Associates in Viera, Fla., knows it, too. If you
are starting to feel overwhelmed by the needs of your older patients,
Dr. Pettit has two pieces of advice: get used to it and get prepared.
More training needed
Traditionally, medical schools have done little to train physicians
to care for the needs of the elderly. Courses in geriatrics were
not even offered until the 1980s; today, less than 5 percent of
medical students take these classes, which are usually electives,
according to Robert N. Butler, M.D., president and chief executive
officer of the International Longevity Center and professor of geriatrics
and adult development at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York
City. In 1975, Butler was the first director of the National Institute
of Aging, and in 1982, he founded the nation’s first geriatrics
department at Mount Sinai.
“A lot of physicians think they
are prepared,” says Butler. “They think it is just a
different age group, so what’s the difference?”
But there clearly are differences. Physicians
need to understand what is a normal part of aging and what is not,
and to grasp the special risk factors that may put the elderly in
danger or complicate their medical conditions.
For example, while memory loss is common
in the elderly, it is not a normal part of aging, according to Sharon
Levine, M.D., associate professor of medicine and director of education
for the geriatrics section at Boston University School of Medicine.
Similarly, 85 percent of incontinence problems are treatable, says
Levine. She also cites this troubling statistic: Older men have
the highest rate of suicide completion of any age group.
“It shouldn’t be that the
patient comes in and says, ‘I am having incontinence,’
and the doctor says, ‘You’re 80; what do you expect?’”
says Levine. “It is not normal to fall; it is not normal to
be incontinent.” To best care for the elderly, physicians
“should be taking any CME course they can take and read the
books” that are published on the topic, says Butler.
“They should make a special effort,
particularly, to learn about those conditions that don’t present
the same way” in a younger person, Butler says. For instance,
an older person experiencing a heart attack might not have the classic
symptom of chest pains, he says.
Drugs, rest often
overdone
According to Butler, medication management is among the most critical
aspects of caring for the elderly. He recommends an “extremely
careful discussion” with all elderly patients about prescription
and nonprescription drugs they are taking, “including the
next door neighbor’s [pills] and any herbal supplements they
may have picked up at the drugstore.”
“Most geriatricians advise patients
to bring all their drugs to the appointment in a bag, and you can
go through them and toss out those that are not needed,” says
Butler.
He also says physicians should assess
patients’ mental health using a mini mental status exam (MMSE);
however, the physician should first explain the purpose of the exam,
because some of the questions may seem demeaning to patients. (A
sample MMSE is available on the Web at www.fpnotebook.com/NEU72.htm).
It asks patients, among other things, to state the current day,
month and year, and to identify two simple items, such as a wristwatch
and a pencil.
It is important to get a physical fitness
history, which physicians don’t think of with an older person,
Butler adds. He says older patients should be encouraged to engage
in aerobic activity for 30 minutes per day, three days a week.
Butler also warns against what he calls
“abuse of rest.”
“The typical thing doctors often
say is, ‘Take it easy.’ That is about the worst advice
you can give an older person, regardless of his or her medical condition,”
he says. “To the degree that it is realistic, have the person
be active. Even stroke patients can be active in swimming pools.”
Such activity prevents bedsores, blood clots and a host of other
problems.
Pettit says his approach to care is also
shaped by his view that a patient’s psychological age can
differ from chronological age.
“If I have a patient sitting in
front of me who I think could live to be 105 and is not taking a
lot of medications, you bet I am going to think about preventive
care,” he says.
Better communication helps
Poor communication is one of the biggest complaints that the elderly
and their families have about physicians.
“Don’t talk to the family
in the absence of the older person,” says Butler. “That
is unethical and inappropriate.” But physicians routinely
do this, he says, because “they have built-in views that older
patients have dementia; there is a kind of ageism and infantalization.”
“Doctors are not answering their
questions, or they will use a fancy medical term, and patients are
intimidated by that,” says Liz Sedaghatfar, a clinical social
worker in Reston, Va., who adds that physicians often don’t
ask the right questions of elderly patients. “They don’t
do enough probing about patients’ living arrangements or safety
factors,” she says.
Speaking frankly and clearly with older
patients is especially important when it comes to end-of-life care
and advance directives. These topics should be broached as soon
as practicable and “when the person is well, because it is
not as frightening,” says Butler. He believes physicians need
more training in this area, as well as in palliative care.
Improving your communication skills extends
to coordinating care with other providers, Butler and Frank agree.
“Because many seniors have multiple
health problems, they need attention paid to integrating their care”
among the many specialists they may also be seeing, says Frank.
“They want the physician to coordinate their care and tell
them what their options are.” She notes that this is especially
important if the patient is facing surgery.
Experts emphasize taking a personal approach
to your elderly patients. When you talk to them, picture your own
parents or older relatives as the patient, they suggest.
Resources, office changes helpful
Medical societies are stepping in to train physicians on care of
the elderly. Pettit attended one such training session at a meeting
of the American College of Physicians — American Society of
Internal Medicine (ACP) to learn how to use a “toolkit”
to assess and treat congestive heart failure in the elderly.
ACP hopes to disseminate information
on care of the elderly through a variety of means. For example,
those like Pettit who have been trained on the toolkits are being
encouraged to arrange to teach others about them through their local
ACP chapters, Levine says.
“Doctors really need this information,”
she says. “It’s not that they are not knowledgeable,
but these patients are challenging and complex, and they require
collaborative care from multiple disciplines.”
For Pettit, the toolkits don’t
necessarily impart new skills, but provide assistance in better
organizing the knowledge he already had. They also offer him new
methods of assessments and handouts for patients and caregivers.
“It helped me make order out of chaos,” he says.
Frank adds that physicians need to have
senior-friendly offices. “Seniors need chairs with back support,
chairs with arms. They need ways to get on and off exam tables.
They frequently need patient education materials in large print,”
she says.
Physicians also must be knowledgeable
about community resources for patients. “The doctor has to
know who to identify in the community — a case manager, physical
therapist, or social worker who will help the family off-load some
of this,” Levine says.
When a geriatrician is needed
There may come a point when it would be best if an older patient
is in the care of a geriatrician, versus a primary care physician.
Levine says a referral could be made
when the patient has “multiple functional issues that are
having an impact on the older person’s ability to be independent,”
and to engage in activities of daily living, such as bathing, grooming,
dressing, eating and walking.
It may also be a good idea to refer patients
who are taking multiple medications that are affecting their abilities,
or those whose caregivers are experiencing a lot of stress, Levine
says.
Referring the patient doesn’t necessarily
mean transferring him permanently to another provider for all care,
but could simply be a way to better address the patient’s
needs. A geriatrics clinic or team would assess the patient, including
addressing their financial situation, and send recommendations back
to the referring physician.
Butler believes geriatricians function
best in a consultative role, on issues such as polypharmacy and
dementia, but should not take over the care of a patient. And he
says geriatricians are most needed to provide more training in medical
schools, and to care for those in assisted living and other residential
facilities for the elderly.
Butler, incidentally, has been practicing
medicine for 50 years and still sees a few patients “who won’t
give me up.” His oldest patient is 92; Butler describes her
as “smart as heck, frail and pretty much housebound …
.”
Sedaghatfar, who has worked in a nursing
home and as a geriatric case manager, adds that once physicians
are better prepared for older patients, they could pursue them as
a new way to add to their practices. “I find working with
them very gratifying,” she says. “They are complicated,
and they can grate on your nerves. But they adore you when you do
right by them.”
| This article is
provided by Physicians Practice and represents the views and
opinions of Physicians Practice and not Humana. |
Back to top
|