John M Heath1, Fred A Kobylarz, Merle Brown, Susan Castaño. 1. Department of Family Medicine, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA. heathjm@UMDNJ.edu
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To describe the interventions for adult protective service (APS) clients referred for geriatric assessment. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING: In-home geriatric assessments conducted in two New Jersey counties. PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred eleven APS clients; 74% female; mean age 77. MEASUREMENTS: Cognition, affect, nutrition, prevalence of selected medical diagnoses and functional conditions, and categories of interventions. RESULTS: Home health agency services were initiated for 46% of APS clients suffering from all forms of mistreatment. Institutional placements (36%) and guardianship interventions (36%) were correlated with caregiver neglect, especially in female APS clients and those diagnosed with dementia. Urgent medications (25%) were prescribed across all mistreatment classifications, and acute hospitalization (20%) was correlated with circumstances of physical abuse. CONCLUSION: An in-home geriatric assessment service was able to contribute at least one relevant intervention for 81% of referred APS clients to collaboratively help mitigate elder mistreatment circumstances.
OBJECTIVES: To describe the interventions for adult protective service (APS) clients referred for geriatric assessment. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING: In-home geriatric assessments conducted in two New Jersey counties. PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred eleven APS clients; 74% female; mean age 77. MEASUREMENTS: Cognition, affect, nutrition, prevalence of selected medical diagnoses and functional conditions, and categories of interventions. RESULTS: Home health agency services were initiated for 46% of APS clients suffering from all forms of mistreatment. Institutional placements (36%) and guardianship interventions (36%) were correlated with caregiver neglect, especially in female APS clients and those diagnosed with dementia. Urgent medications (25%) were prescribed across all mistreatment classifications, and acute hospitalization (20%) was correlated with circumstances of physical abuse. CONCLUSION: An in-home geriatric assessment service was able to contribute at least one relevant intervention for 81% of referred APS clients to collaboratively help mitigate elder mistreatment circumstances.
Authors: Tony Rosen; Alyssa Elman; Sarah Dion; Diana Delgado; Michelle Demetres; Risa Breckman; Kristin Lees; Kim Dash; Debi Lang; Alice Bonner; Jason Burnett; Carmel B Dyer; Rani Snyder; Amy Berman; Terry Fulmer; Mark S Lachs Journal: J Am Geriatr Soc Date: 2019-03-22 Impact factor: 5.562