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Aging and Critical Care, An Issue of Critical Care Nursing Clinics -  Sonya Hardin

Aging and Critical Care, An Issue of Critical Care Nursing Clinics (eBook)

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2014 | 1. Auflage
100 Seiten
Elsevier Health Sciences (Verlag)
978-0-323-26093-0 (ISBN)
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This issue of Endocrinology Clinics brings the reader up to date on the important advances in research surrounding acute diabetic complications.  Guest edited by Leonid Poretsky and Eliana Liao, the topics covered include retinopathy, neuropathy,  gastrointestinal complications, diabetic foot, dental complications, dermatologic complications, and more.
This issue of Endocrinology Clinics brings the reader up to date on the important advances in research surrounding acute diabetic complications. Guest edited by Leonid Poretsky and Eliana Liao, the topics covered include retinopathy, neuropathy, gastrointestinal complications, diabetic foot, dental complications, dermatologic complications, and more.

The Epidemiology of Acute and Critical Illness in Older Adults


Linda Bell, RN, MSN,     Technology-Based Learning, American Association of Critical Care Nurses, 101 Columbia, Aliso Viejo, CA 92656, USA. Email: Linda.bell@aacn.org

The world and US population continues to increase with an extended lifespan. Disability rates in older adults have not changed, however; they are living longer with disabilities that affect quality of life and complicate acute and critical illness. Because increasing numbers of older adults will live with disabilities and chronic disease, new strategies are needed to improve both quality of life and end-of-life decision making.

Keywords

Older adult

Critical care

Acute

Mortality

Transitions

Key points


• The general population of those over age 65 is increasing as well as that of those over age 85.

• Admissions to medical ICUs increase with aging whereas admissions to surgical ICUs are more likely from procedural complications or trauma.

• Among Medicare patient readmissions, 60% are considered potentially preventable.

• Age over 75 is an independent predictor of mortality in ICU admissions, especially in patients who receive mechanical ventilation.

Introduction


The population continues to grow across the globe. In 2010, the United Nations estimated the world population at 6.9 billion, with approximately 3.5 billion male and 3.4 billion female. At that time, the estimate for people over age 65 worldwide was approximately 500 million, with 353,000 over age 100.1 At the same time, population in the United States was more than 300 million. An estimated 43 million of those were over age 65; almost 6 million were over age 85.2 The 2010 census also found that, for the first time, the number of those aging was increasing rapidly with a concomitant decreasing birth rate.3 The same census also found that the number of individuals over age 65 living in family households in the United States was twice that of those not living with family; and twice as many women were living alone as were men.4

Hospital admissions for individuals over age 65 are measured by admissions from the community and from nursing homes. Community admissions in 2009 were more frequent, at a rate of 310.7/1000 whereas admissions from nursing homes were at a rate of 204.5/1000. Patients admitted from nursing homes had a longer length of stay, however, and were more likely to die in the hospital. Infections, such as septicemia and urinary tract infection (UTI), were the predominant reason for admission from nursing homes. Admission rates for patients over age 65, whether from community or nursing homes, are at an approximately 2 to 3 times greater rate than for patients under age 65.5

Admissions to the ICU


The Society of Critical Care Medicine has estimated approximately 5 million admissions to ICUs per year.6 Patients over age 65 accounted for 45% of admissions in one study, with 10% of admissions for patients 85 years or older. The percentage of patients admitted to medical ICUs increases per decade after age 65 whereas the percentage of admissions to the surgical intensive care decreases by decade. Trauma and infectious disease admissions increase with advancing age.7 Patients over 85 are more likely to be admitted to the ICU after a surgical procedure. Patients admitted without an ICU stay had lower inpatient and 90-day mortality for surgical rather than medical admissions.8

Primary admitting diagnosis to the ICU in the over-65 age group changes based on the decade. In the 75 to 84 age group, the principal diagnoses in order of frequency are congestive heart failure (CHF), pneumonia, irregular heartbeat, septicemia, osteoarthritis, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. In patients over 85 years, the order of frequency changes to CHF, pneumonia, septicemia, UTIs, irregular heartbeat, and hip fractures. The most common procedure for all patients above age 75 is blood transfusion. Procedures for degenerative bone and joint disorders are more common above age 85, with hospitalization for hip fracture 10 times more frequent than for the 75 to 84–year old age group. The most common procedures in hospitalized patients ages 75 to 84 after blood transfusion are diagnostic cardiac procedures, upper gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopy, and respiratory intubation and mechanical ventilation, followed by echocardiogram and hemodialysis. In the 85+-year-old age group, blood transfusions were followed by upper GI endoscopy, respiratory intubation and mechanical ventilation, diagnostic cardiac catheterization, treatment of fracture of dislocation of the hip and femur, and colonoscopy and biopsy.9,10

Effects of aging and quality of life


The US Burden of Disease Collaborators found in reviewing their data on disability-adjusted life years (DALY), healthy life expectancy (HALE), and years lived with disability (YLD) that, although cardiovascular diseases, cancer, and chronic respiratory disease all contribute to YLD, by far the largest contributors are mental/behavioral disorders, such as major depressive disorders, and musculoskeletal disorders, such as low back pain. Although life span is increasing, there is not a decrease in years lived with disability; rather, YLDs increased because onset of disability years has remained stable. Contributors to DALYs were diet, tobacco smoking, high body mass index, high blood pressure, high fasting plasma glucose, physical inactivity, and alcohol use.11 Gill and colleagues12 found, however, that the trajectory of disability in their study population was not linked to the cause of death except in the patients with advanced dementia. The goal of Healthy People 2010 was to increase perceived health-related quality of life for both physical and mental health. Key surveillance findings were that the biggest increase in overall unhealthy days occurred between ages 45 and 64; however, although the physically unhealthy days increased in the 65 to 74–year old group mentally, unhealthy days and activity limitation days showed no consistent trends.13

Older adults have a higher risk of admission to the ICU secondary to trauma and this risk factor increases with age, most likely due to instability, medications, or strange environments.7 Scheetz14 also identified calcium loss with decreased bone density, diminished vision, and cognitive decline as risk factors for injury. The metabolic response to injury is also affected in the older population who may have a decreased sensitivity to intrinsic catecholamine release with subsequent decrease in cardiovascular stimulation. Preinjury malnutrition affects transition from the catabolic to anabolic phase. Wound healing is affected by thinning of the skin and decreased collagen synthesis with an increased risk of infection secondary to changes in immune response related to aging. Delirium and dementia occur at a rate of 8.1 stays/1000 population, which is 7 times the admission rate for 65 to 74 year olds.9

Transitions and readmissions


Older adult patients with ICU admissions related to trauma/falls are more likely to be discharged to long-term care than patients in the same age group admitted for other diagnoses.15 Patients age 85 and older are hospitalized at a rate twice that of 65 to 74 year olds and represent a larger share of discharges than their equivalent representation in the total population (8.0/1.8) compared with the 65 to 74–year old group (13.8/4.3% of population). They are also 2.5 times more likely to be discharge to long-term care facilities than the 65 to 74–year old group and have a slightly longer inpatient stay (5.6 compared with 5.3 days).9

Data from 2008 showed that 60% of all hospitalizations considered potentially preventable were in patients 65 or older. Although men were more likely to be admitted for potentially preventable conditions, women were more likely to be admitted for preventable acute conditions. Potentially preventable chronic care admissions accounted for 10.1% of Medicare stays whereas 6.8% of stays were attributed to preventable acute care conditions.16 Krumholtz and colleagues17 found that strong predictors of mortality were not necessarily strong predictors of readmissions. Patients admitted from the community but discharged to nursing homes were admitted with one of the following: an injury, infection, musculoskeletal disorders, or stroke or other cerebrovascular disease.7 Also of significance, patients with low health literacy are sicker than a matched group with higher health literacy.18

The report of a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation–funded analysis found many themes during interviews with recently discharged patients and families/caregivers. In some cases, patients did not see readmission as a problem, whereas others thought they were discharged too soon without understanding their discharge instructions or that care instructions were not specific enough. Patients found managing new diagnoses challenging; however, those with long-term chronic conditions did not have adequate education...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 28.3.2014
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Pflege Fachpflege Anästhesie / Intensivmedizin
ISBN-10 0-323-26093-4 / 0323260934
ISBN-13 978-0-323-26093-0 / 9780323260930
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