Does functional decline prompt emergency department visits and admission in older patients?

Title

Does functional decline prompt emergency department visits and admission in older patients?

Creator

Wilber S T; Blanda M; Gerson L W

Publisher

Academic Emergency Medicine

Date

2006
2006-06

Description

BACKGROUND: Older patients may visit the emergency department (ED) when their illness affects their function. OBJECTIVES: To quantify the function of older ED patients, to assess whether functional decline (FD) had occurred, and to determine whether function contributes to the ED visit and hospital admission. METHODS: The authors performed an institutional review board-approved, prospective, cross-sectional study in a community teaching hospital ED. Eligible patients were older than 74 years of age, with an illness at least 48 hours old. Patients from a nursing facility and those without a proxy who were unable or unwilling to complete the questions were excluded. The Older Americans Resources and Services Questionnaire, which tests seven instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) and seven physical ADLs (PADL), was used. Data are presented as means or proportions with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI), and comparisons as 95% CI for the difference between proportions. RESULTS: The authors enrolled 90 patients (mean age, 81.6 yr [SD +/- 4.9], 40% male). Dependence in at least one IADL was reported by 68% (95% CI = 57% to 77%), and in at least one PADL by 61% (95% CI = 50% to 71%). Functional decline was reported by 74% (95% CI = 64% to 83%). Two thirds of those with IADL decline and three quarters of those with PADL decline said that this contributed to their ED visit. Seventy-seven percent with, and 63% without, IADL decline were admitted (14% difference, 95% CI = -6.1% to 33%). Seventy-nine percent with and 61% without PADL decline were admitted (18% difference, 95% CI = -1.4% to 38%). CONCLUSIONS: Functional decline is common in older ED patients and contributes to ED visits in older patients; its role in admission is unclear.

Subject

Female; Male; Ohio; Aged; Prospective Studies; Hospitals; Activities of Daily Living; Confidence Intervals; Human; Convenience Sample; Questionnaires; Cross Sectional Studies; Descriptive Statistics; Funding Source; Data Analysis Software; Surveys; Coefficient Alpha; Clinical Assessment Tools; Emergency Service; Community; Geriatric Functional Assessment; 80 and Over; Emergency Care – In Old Age; Functional Status – In Old Age; Health Resource Utilization – In Old Age; Patient Admission – In Old Age

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Pages

680–682

Issue

6

Volume

13

Citation

Wilber S T; Blanda M; Gerson L W, “Does functional decline prompt emergency department visits and admission in older patients?,” NEOMED Bibliography Database, accessed May 10, 2024, https://neomed.omeka.net/items/show/6087.