Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment Flashcards

1
Q

What number of people in hospital are over 65?

A

2/3rd

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2
Q

Frailty is not an illness itself, it is what?

A

A susceptibility state - frail individuals are more at risk of disability and multi-morbidity

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3
Q

What does progressive accumulation of damage to a complex system result in?

A

Aggregate loss of system redundancy

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4
Q

What happens as systems age?

A

The ability of the body to repair minor damages in its redundant state becomes reduced, resulting in more multi-morbidities, disability and medical intervention

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5
Q

What does age-related decline lead to?

A

Impairment of individual organ function
Breakdown of the complex interplay between organ systems (dyshomeostasis)
Increased susceptibility to environmental stress resulting in frailty

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6
Q

What is the definition of frailty according to Rockwood?

A

A reduced ability to withstand illness without loss of function

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7
Q

What methods are there to help identify frail people?

A

Frailty index
Frailty phenotype
Frailty syndromes
HIS ‘Think Frailty’

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8
Q

How is frailty identified?

A

Can use methods such as frailty index, but largely it is something that can be seen on observation and examination

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9
Q

3 of the 5 criteria in the frailty phenotype are needed to identify someone as frail, what are these criteria?

A
Unintentional weight loss
Exhaustion 
Weak grip strength 
Slow walking speed
Low physical activity
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10
Q

What are some frailty syndromes?

A

Falls
Immobility
Delirium
Functional loss

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11
Q

What does dyshomeostasis lead to in illness?

A

Multiple body systems being involved in one illness

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12
Q

What are frailty syndromes?

A

Essentially presentations of system failures

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13
Q

What are the criteria of HIS ‘Think Frailty’?

A

Functional impairment in context of significant multiple conditions (new or pre-existing)
Resident in a care home
Acute confusion, diagnosis of dementia or history of chronic confusion
Immobility or falls in last 3 months
List of six or more medicines (poly pharmacy)

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14
Q

Rather than a binary concept, what should frailty be viewed as?

A

A spectrum, ranging from minimal frailty to severe frailty

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15
Q

Repeated insults result in what?

A

Gradually decompensated frailty

Axis of increasing complexity (i.e. more multi-morbidity and disability)

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16
Q

People with physical frailty are often frail in what domains?

A

Multiple health domains

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17
Q

Why can health not be viewed as a binary state?

A

It is a dynamic process - changes from hour-to-hour, day-to-day, complete physical, social and mental well-being is almost always not achievable

18
Q

What are the health domains?

A
Medical 
Psychological
Functional 
Behavioural
Nutritional 
Spiritual 
Environmental 
Social 
Societal
19
Q

What does illness in frail people lead to?

A

Disruption in multiple health domains, which can be triggered by disruption in any health domain

20
Q

How have illness trajectories changed?

A

Fewer sudden deaths e.g. due to MI, stroke

Increasing frailty and organ failure

21
Q

Why does our healthcare paradigm present challenges for comprehensive geriatric assessment?

A

It continues to be disease/system specific in research, guidelines, medical education and training, and secondary care

22
Q

What are the problems for the medical health domain?

A
Pathological 
Physiological 
Reversible or irreversible 
Multiple concomitant problems 
Iatrogenic harm 
Majority of modern medicine treats/ameliorates chronic disease or acute exacerbations of chronic disease 
Few things in medicine are truly curable
23
Q

How is spiritual care person-centred?

A

It focuses on what is important to that individual and takes into account what their wishes are for their care

24
Q

What are the factors affecting the psychological health domain?

A

Mood
Confidence
Cognition

25
Q

What are the factors affecting the functional health domain?

A

Mobility
Activities of daily living
Community living skills

26
Q

What are the factors affecting the behavioural health domain?

A

Behavioural determinants of ill-health e.g. smoking, unhealthy eating
Activities/pastimes
Occupation

27
Q

What are the factors affecting the environmental health domain?

A

Housing
Heating
Sanitation
Adaptation

28
Q

What are the factors affecting the social health domain?

A

Support networks

Potential for abuse

29
Q

What are the factors affecting the societal health domain?

A

Attitudes to the ageing and elderly
Technological advances
Political
Regulations

30
Q

What is comprehensive geriatric assessment?

A

The process used to assess and manage illness in older people with frailty

31
Q

What is comprehensive geriatric assessment used for?

A

To;
Determine what the problem are - where multiple medical problems present at once and where multiple health domains are affected
Determine what can be reversed and what can be made better
Produce a management plan

32
Q

What is the approach of comprehensive geriatric assessment? What are the benefits of this approach?

A

Goal-centred rather than problem-centred
Preserves autonomy
Means we do what the patient wants, not what the doctor wants
Effective way of dealing with multi-morbidity and competing clinical priorities

33
Q

What are the key professions involved in comprehensive geriatric assessment?

A

Geriatrician
Occupational therapist
Physiotherapist
Skilled nurses

34
Q

What other professions are involved in comprehensive geriatric assessment?

A
GP
Other doctors
Social worker
Home care
Dietician
35
Q

What are the established models of comprehensive geriatric assessment?

A

Inpatient
Intermediate care
Hospital at home

36
Q

What does good geriatric care allow?

A

Early identification of need
Early comprehensive geriatric assessment
Early provision of appropriate level of care for need

37
Q

What evidence is there supporting the benefit of comprehensive geriatric assessment?

A

Ellis et al Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment for older adults admitted to hospital: meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials
More likely to be alive and living at home at:
• 6 months OR 1.25, p < 0.001, NNT 17
• 12 months OR 1.16, p = 0.003, NNT 33
Less likely to be living in residential care
• OR 0.78, p < 0.001

CGA is proven to improve health outcomes in frail older people. The earlier in an illness trajectory a frail person undergoes CGA, the better the outcomes are likely to be

38
Q

What are the benefits of hospitalisation?

A

Access to clinical expertise
Access to complex tests and interventions
Rapid access to supervised care support

39
Q

What are the risks of hospitalisation?

A
Disorientation and delirium 
Learned dependency 
Deconditioning 
Iatrogenic harm 
Hospital Acquired Infection
40
Q

When should patients be discharged from hospital?

A

When goals are met, or when risk of staying in hospital outweighs the benefits