| Literature DB >> 30451060 |
John G Schumacher1, Jon Mark Hirshon2, Phillip Magidson3, Marilyn Chrisman4, Terisita Hogan5.
Abstract
The traditional model of emergency care no longer fits the growing needs of the over 20 million older adults annually seeking emergency department care. In 2007 a tailored "geriatric emergency department" model was introduced and rapidly replicated among hospitals, rising steeply over the past 5 years. This survey examined all U.S. emergency departments self-identifying themselves as Geriatric Emergency Departments (GEDs) and providing enhanced geriatric emergency care services. It was guided by the recently adopted Geriatric Emergency Department Guidelines and examined domains including, GED identity, staffing, and administration; education, equipment, and supplies; policies, procedures, and protocols; follow-up and transitions of care; and quality improvement. Results reveal a heterogeneous mix of GED staffing, procedures, physical environments and that GEDs' familiarity with the GED Guidelines is low. Findings will inform emergency departments and gerontologists nationwide about key GED model elements and will help hospitals to improve ED services for their older adult patients.Entities:
Keywords: geriatrics; health; health services
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30451060 DOI: 10.1177/0733464818813030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Gerontol ISSN: 0733-4648