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Older Patients Are At Risk in the Hospital: How to Advocate
Older Patients Are At Risk in the Hospital - How To Be An Advocate for Your Parent, Grandparent, Spouse or Other Older Loved One
You might think that admitting an older adult to the hospital is as simple as dropping them off at "Admitting" and allowing the hospital staff to take care of the rest. Think again. Older adults desperately need your help because a hospital stay can be fraught with medical errors, medication mistakes, falls, infectious diseases and a host of other life threatening events.
Hospital medical staff want the very best medical care for your older loved one but they are under tremendous pressure. Few can overcome patient overload, a nationwide nursing shortage and a developing physician shortage. Many hospitals in the U.S. suffer financial duress, rendering them unable to accommodate the many needs and vulnerabilities of older adults.
Enter the patient advocate. You as a family member or good friend must monitor an older adult's medical care and provide support during a hospital stay.
Hospital Risks for Older Patients
- Delirium occurs in 1/3 of hospitalized patients over the age of 65 and in more than 70% of older people in Intensive Care Units. Reasons for this include serious illness, exposure to new medications, disruption of normal routines and sleep disturbance. Family members are often the first to notice changes that might indicate delirium.
- If an older adult cannot reposition himself, he is at risk for pressure ulcers (bed sores). Pressure ulcers affect 1 million adults annually.
- Older patients may have multiple medical issues, requiring several specialists to be involved in his case. This can be confusing and difficult to coordinate for any patient.
- New medications may be introduced which can lead to side effects. Older patients may already be taking multiple medications which can lead to adverse effects.
- Older adults are at risk for falls, especially if they are sedated or disoriented. Among older adults, falls are the leading cause of injury and deaths.
- Older adults can be at risk for malnutrition. Studies cite that 58% of patients 65 and older have problems eating. Nutritional status of older patients has been reported to diminish in hospitals. This can slow recovery.
- The spread of infectious diseases such as MRSA and pneumonia are rampant in hospitals. The reason pneumonia acquired in the hospital is more severe may be due to the more aggressive infecting organisms, making it harder to treat.
What a Patient Advocate Can Do
- Patient's Medical History. Bring in your loved one's complete medical history. An older patient in the hospital may be too ill to gather the information.
- List of Patient's Medications. Bring a current list of the patient's medications, including over-the-counter mediations, herbs and supplements. Include allergies to medications.
- Glasses and Hearing Aides. Be sure your loved one has his or her glasses and any hearing aides.
- Make the Patient's Hospital Room Like Home. Older patients do better in the hospital if some of their routine and sense of familiarity is preserved. Bring in the outside world to their hospital room. This includes a cozy comforter, photos of family and friends, a clock to help them keep track of time, bathrobe, their address book should they want to contact loved ones, books, newspapers, MP3, CD, DVD or tape players with familiar programs or music.
- Bed Sores. If the patient is unable to reposition himself in bed, monitor how many times his body is turned to prevent pressure ulcers (bed sores). Ask the patient's primary nurse to help you with this.
- Meet the Doctors. Be present during doctors' rounds to have face-to-face interactions with the physicians. You want these medical professionals to see you as a human being who is involved with the patient. Create a list of questions ahead of time and document the answers in a notebook.
- Be Aware of Behavior and Mood Changes. Document in a notebook how the patient is doing on a daily basis. Be aware of any sudden mood or cognitive changes in the patient such as drowsiness, apathy, confusion, little or no speech or movement, agitation or hallucinations. If you notice a sudden change, bring it to the attention of the patient's physician and primary nurse and ask for an evaluation.
- Monitor meals. Sometimes older patients have a difficult time eating and may need some assistance. The meal tray can be taken away before it has been consumed. Monitor dietary restrictions to make sure the patient receives meals the doctor has ordered. You can also bring in meals from home, but check with the patient's primary nurse first.
- Prevent Falls. If your loved one is at risk for falling, be at bedside at all times. You can create a Family Advocate Team with other loved ones taking shifts. This prevents the need for restraints.
- Prevent Diseases in the Hospital. To prevent the spread of hospital-acquired infectious diseases such as MRSA and pneumonia, ask everyone who comes in contact with the patient to wash their hands. An older patient may not be up to this task. You can create a hand-made sign to be placed on the wall above the patient's bed that says, "Please wash your hands before touching me." Place anti-bacterial gel by the patient's bed and ask everyone to use it. Try to get your older loved one into a private hospital room--this cuts down on the cross contamination of diseases considerably.
- Provide Comfort. Last but not least, provide comfort to the patient. He or she may be frightened in the hospital and may feel even more uncomfortable with the loss of control than you might. Reassure him that he will get better and that you and your Family Advocate Team are watching out for him.
Martine Ehrenclou, M.A., is an award-winning author, patient advocate and speaker. Author of the multiple award-winning Critical Conditions, and her newest health book The Take-Charge Patient, Martine is focused on empowering patients so they become experts on how navigate and take charge of their medical care. Her mission is to bring to light the importance of being an advocate for others and for ourselves. Through her books, published articles, media interviews, and lectures, Martine Ehrenclou reveals insider information on how to work the healthcare system for the patient's benefit, which are the result of extensive research and her own recent chronic pain medical condition. Her pieces at Lumigrate are found in the forum about preparation for medical impairment at the following link www.lumigrate.com/forums/be-prepared-medically-impaired-happens-all-ages/being-prepared-medical-visits-problems-best-l
To find or contact her elsewhere:
Martine Ehrenclou, M.A
Office:(310) 471-1740 Fax: (310) 476-7627
Martine@criticalconditions.com
Twitter: www.twitter.com/Med_writer Facebook: www.facebook.com/martineehrenclou
This forum is provided to allow members of Lumigrate to share information and ideas. Any recommendations made by forum members regarding medical treatments, medications, or procedures are not endorsed by Lumigrate or practitioners who serve as Lumigrate's medical experts.


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I ask questions and provide links to two supportive piece I've written in this section to explain from my personal experience why I encourage people SO strongly to grasp onto the concepts Martine's work is about. My husband got MRSA in his brain in the 1980s before I was an OT/medical worker/savvy, and then after years of experience, I had a horrible (but now FUNNY) experience at the hospital for a hysterectomy in 2006. Those can be followed by going to:
www.lumigrate.com/forum/older-patients-are-risk-hospital-how-advocate-0
Mardy Ross, OTR Founder, Lumigrate "Lighting the Path to Health and Well-Being" Follow us on social networking sites such as: Twitter: http://twitter.com/lumigrate facebook: My personal page: Mardy Ross Fan Pages: Lumigrate, Lumigrate: Fibromyalgia, Lumigrate: Fibromyalgia Health Education and Counseling (Lumigrate Webucation is a 'personal page' replaced by fan pages but used for 'fun' still).