| Literature DB >> 29872596 |
Brian J Nagle1, Andrea Berry2, Laurel Gorman3, Mariana Dangiolo4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The aging population is growing quickly and has a higher prevalence of comorbid and chronic diseases. A majority of this group resides in the home setting. The purpose of this study was to examine the attitudes of third-year medical students following a pilot component of an internal medicine clerkship, consisting of four in-home visits with geriatric patients.Entities:
Keywords: clerkship; elective; geriatrics; in-home care; medical education
Year: 2018 PMID: 29872596 PMCID: PMC5984257 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.2415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Major Themes and Noted Advantages and Concerns
|
Table | ||
| Major Themes and Noted Advantages and Concerns | ||
| Themes | Noted advantages | Noted concerns |
| Patient home-setting | More complete medication & supplement review | Fewer resources (e.g., medical equipment, medications, lab results) than clinical setting |
| More time for patient to prepare | ||
| More time with the patient | ||
| Slower pace allowed more thorough discussion | Less formal/professional than clinical setting | |
| Patient “in their natural setting” | ||
| Patient “more comfortable in their space” | ||
| Relationship building | More time to build relationship and get “the whole story” | Visit could be time-consuming |
| Better communication - more time to listen to patient | ||
| More time to ensure understanding, write out clear instructions | ||
| Learning the right questions to ask | ||
| Insight into the aging process | Obtain “a better picture of what their life is like” than if in office | Seeing patients at their best in home setting |
| Enhanced ability to access patient environmental risks (falls in environment) | ||
| Awareness of finances, economic issues | ||
| Greater ability to access quality of life issues like independence and loneliness | ||
| Appreciation for how elderly manage complex polypharmacy issues | ||
| Greater insight to social issues and support | ||
| Compassion | Gained awareness of importance of listening | Expressed concerns about society not understanding barriers elderly face |
| Improved empathy for their concerns with medications and lifestyle | Elderly being marginalized in medical care | |
| Improved patience | Life expectancy increasing but society needs better understanding of how to manage elder care | |
| Insight into the importance of spending time with elderly patients | ||
| Program design | Rewarding program | Patients independent & self-sufficient; need for more diverse sample of elderly |
| Patients were well selected – diverse but open patient group | Need for more time allotted for the visits | |
| Enjoyed working in pairs of two | Would like to see patients from less privileged backgrounds to better understand wider range of elderly issues (compliance, medication affordability, etc) | |
| Workbook helpful | Geographical issues (e.g., transportation issues in getting to home visit sites) | |
| “Continuity” of care – saw same patient for return visit | ||
| Future quality of care | Better insight in geriatrics as a career choice | Feasibility of home-visits due to time and geographical constraints as physician |
| More confidence in working with elderly patients | ||
| Improved understanding of elderly issues would impact future care of elderly patients regardless of specialty | ||
| Better grasp of “what questions” to ask elderly patients | ||