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Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment. Mohamad Sabbah M.D Family Medicine. A- Learning Objectives. To know the Definition of Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment. To understand the Importance of Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment. To know the multiple Domains of Geriatric evaluation.
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Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment Mohamad Sabbah M.D Family Medicine
A- Learning Objectives • To know the Definition of Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment. • To understand the Importance of Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment. • To know the multiple Domains of Geriatric evaluation. • To know the Useful tools used for evaluation
B- Outline: • Introduction Case • Defining Comprehensive Geriatric assessment (CGA) • Explain the importance of CGA based on literature. • Domains of evaluation: list and tools. • Conclusion
C- Introduction: • K.R, 85 year old Female, living at home by herself, had fallen down the stairs one week ago. Since her fall, she walks slowly while holding her hands to the furniture, doesn’t want to leave the apartment, not eating well and calling anxiously her daughter multiple times per day. • Her daughter brought to the primary care clinic for evaluation. • Physical exam practically normal. • How can the family physician (or the Referral Geriatrician) evaluate this patient?
1-Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment Definition • Multidimensional,Multidisciplinary diagnostic process. • Goal: determine a frail elderly person’s medical,psychosocial, and functional capacities and problems. • Objective: develop an overall plan of treatment & long-term follow-up. • Concept started in 1930 (Dr Warren); now regarded as the “technology” of geriatric medicine. JKH luk, HKMJ 2000;6:93-8 Rubenstein.Clin Geriatr Med 1987;3:1-15.
1- Definition of Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment • Assessment involves an interdisciplinary team: - Geriatrician or primary care physician - Geriatric nurse - Social worker - Physical therapist/Occupational therapist - Pharmacist - Psychologist/Psychiatrist - Dietitian
2- Importance of Comprehensive Geriatric assessment: • Population is aging • 1998: Age 65+ numbered 34 million (in USA) • 2030: Age 65+ will number 70 million • Largest increase in those over age 85 • Majority of elderly will be cared for by internists and family practitioners
CGA: benefits • Survival benefit: Clearly demonstrated in inpatient settings and in home healthcare (3-4) Not proved in outpatient settings (5) • Other: quality of life, functional status, patient satisfaction, rate of institutionalization or hospitalization Clear benefit (Hendriksen et al.,1984; Vetter et al.,1984; Applegate et al.,1990; Saltvedt et al.,2002; H.-K kuo et al. Arch Gero & Geria 39 2004 245-254)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Luk et al; HKMJ March 2000
3- Domains evaluated by CGA? ًWHO.health of the elderly.1989
3-Domains evaluated by CGA? Functional status • Level of dependence: Katz activities of daily living (ADL) Lawton Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL scale)
Small changes in function make a big difference in quality of life for patients and their caregivers.
3-Domains evaluated by CGA? Physical health • Vision: don’t forget Underreporting of symptoms • Hearing: Presbycusis : present in > 50 % of older persons. • Urinary continence • Sexual History: discomfort may result from physician rather than patients attitudes; simple open-ended question. • Falls and Gait & medications *
3-Domains evaluated by CGA? Nutritional Status • MNA: mini-nutritional assessment -30 items -Association of: anthropometric and dietary parameters, global evaluation and a subjective evaluation of health -The first 6 items are enough for screening -Well validated in USA and Europe (6) - Able to classify 75 % of patients - Good nutritionnal status >24 - Denutrition < 17 Rubenstein et al; J Gerontol 96:M366-72,2001
3-Domains evaluated by CGA? Cognitive/ Mental health • Depression screening:
3-Domains evaluated by CGA? Cognitive/ Mental health • Depression Evaluation: • Geriatric Depression scale: GDS -15 items -Validated in multiple countries for ambulatory patients. -Score > 6/15 --> depression : Se 92% Sp 81%. -To be used only for patients with a mini-mental > 14/30 SCHEIKH JI et al; Clin Gerontol, 1986; 5:161-73.
3-Domains evaluated by CGA?Cognitive / Mental health 2 simple and brief tests: Blessed memory test: -Recall of 5-item (name and address). -Re-ask after few minutes of distraction -(+) if failure to recall 3 out of 5. One minute verbal fluency test: - Ask to name 10 animal names - (+) inability to name at least 10 different animals in one minute.
When do we do dementia evaluation? 3-Domains evaluated by CGA?Cognitive / Mental health
3-Domains evaluated by CGA?Cognitive / Mental health Cognitive EvaluationMMSE: Folstein • Orientation: (5 + 5) • Registration: name 3 common objects (3) • Attention and calculation: serials of 7 backwards stop after5 answers, alternatively spell world backwards (5) • Recall (3) • Language (9) • “Cut off” usually cited as 24
3-Domains evaluated by CGA?Cognitive / Mental health MMSE • Pattern of misses more important to interpretation than overall score. • Education, cultural, and age biases • Score impacted by literacy, depression, CVAs • Version exist in Arabic Crum; JAMA 1994
4- Domains evaluated by CGA Socio-environmental Factors • Detailed knowledge of any change in living, who is available at home or in the local community. • Inquiring about: stairs, rugs, thresholds, bathing facilities, heating. • Home visit is the best method • Extent of Social relationships is a powerful predictor of functional status and mortality. Berkman LF.Am J Epidem 1986;123:559
Screening for Specific Problems:Falls and Gait Disorders Major cause of morbidity and mortality - 1/3 of elderly fall each year - Major cause of NH placement - Falls, mobility impairment, and functional impairment closely related
Fall History Assessment: • Ask the Patient: Have you fallen in the past year? • Gait Assessment • Up and Go Test • Rise from chair, walk 10 feet, turn around, walk back, sit down • Timed Up and Go Test- normal less than 10 seconds
Screening for Specific Problems:Caregiver Stress and Abuse • Caregiver stress highly correlated with increased risk of institutionalization, abuse and neglect. • Education & support of Caregiver is very important. • Clues: Caregiver miss appointments,concerned about medical costs, history of substance abuse, dominates interview,defensive, hostile, dependence on patient for income. • Q & A: Do you feel Safe at home?
Screening for Specific Problems:Medications • Elderly use 3X more medications than younger patients. • Drug distribution, elimination, excretion, & pharmacodynamics altered in elderly. • ADR’s and drug-drug interactions increase markedly with # drugs used. • Medications linked to “reversible dementias”, falls, incontinence, hospitalizations, death.
Clinical Case: • K.R, 85 year old Female, living at home by herself, had fallen down the stairs one week ago. Since her fall, she walks slowly while holding her hands to the furniture, doesn’t want to leave the apartment, not eating well and calling anxiously her daughter multiple times per day. • Her daughter brought to the primary care clinic for evaluation. • Physical exam practically normal. • How can the family physician (or the Referral Geriatrician) evaluate this patient?
Clinical Case • “Get up and go”: test takes 45 sec; difficulty rising of the chair; incapacity of advancement without holding to the furniture. • ADL (5/6): needs aid for toileting and eating. • IADL (10/14): (budget management issue…) • MMS: 20/30: (short term memory problems, moderate temporo-spatial disorientation, calculcation problems) • GDS: 8/15 • MNA: 23/30 • Social evaluation: daughter is 55 y o with a husband having lung cancer; can take her home on weekends; a niece available twice per week; earns 600 dollars per month; can’t perceive any allocation at home;
Impression: post-fall syndrome with depressive symptomatology; Recent loss of autonomy; moderate cognitive problems; De-nutrition risk. • Management proposed by the doctor: • Physical therapy at home. • Antidepressant treatment. • Visiting nurse at home twice a week (for complete toileting) • Family intervention on week-end and for budget management. • Visiting maid for help in eating • Follow-up evaluation in 2 months.
Conclusion • Primary health care practitioners play important roles in patient care. • The primary health care system is not well established in Lebanon; elderly assessment is shifted to hospitals and specialist care. • GPs need to learn more about geriatric care. • Importance of multidisciplinary Geriatric assessment • Assess all the domains • Screen for geriatric syndromes: • falls, incontinence, dementia, depression, hearing, vision, pain…
References: 1- JKH lukU et al. Using the CGA technique to assess elderly patient; HMMJ Vol 6 No 1 March 2000. 2- Rainfray Muriel et al.: Comprehensive Geriatric assessment: a useful tool for prevention of acute situation in elderly; Ann.Med.Interne,2002;153,6,347-402. 3-Saldvedt et al. Reduced mortality in treating acutely sick, frail older patients in a geriatric evaluation and management unit. J.Am.Geriatr.Soc,2002; 50,792-798. 4- Appelgate et al.; 1991;Geriatric evaluation and management: current status and future research directions.J.Am.Geriatr.Soc;39,2S-7S. 5- H-K kuo et al.The influence of outpatient Geriatric assessment on survival; a meta-analysis; Arch of Geront and Geriartrics 39 (2004) 245-254.
6- Scheikh Ji, Yesavage Ja: Geriatric depression scale (GDS): recent evidence and development of a shorter version.Clin Gerontol, 1986;5:161-173. • 7- Guigoz et al.: mini-nutritionnal assessment: a practical assessment tool for grading nutritionnal state of elderly patients. Facts Res Gerontol, 1994:21-60.