| Literature DB >> 30968287 |
James W Garrard1, Natalie J Cox2,3,4, Richard M Dodds2,5,6, Helen C Roberts2,4,7, Avan A Sayer2,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) involves the multidimensional assessment and management of an older person. It is well described in hospital and home-based settings. A novel approach could be to perform CGA within primary healthcare, the initial community located healthcare setting for patients, improving accessibility to a co-located multidisciplinary team. AIM: To appraise the evidence on CGA implemented within the primary care practice.Entities:
Keywords: Comprehensive geriatric assessment; Older people; Primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30968287 PMCID: PMC7033083 DOI: 10.1007/s40520-019-01183-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Clin Exp Res ISSN: 1594-0667 Impact factor: 3.636
PICO for study inclusion
| Population | People aged 65 years and over, not defined by a specific health condition |
| Intervention | Comprehensive geriatric assessment integrated into the primary care practice |
| Comparator | Any, or no, comparator used |
| Outcomes | Primary: method of implementation Secondary: acceptability of the intervention and cost effectiveness. Clinical outcomes of acute care admission, mortality and medicines management |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram showing the selection of articles for inclusion and exclusion
Details of included studies
| Author, year. Country, reference | Subgroup | Study design | Number of participants | Number of practices | Participant mean age (SD) (% female) | CGA intervention | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Disciplines involved | Initial assessment | Second assessment | PCP involvement | Patient follow-up | ||||||
Hermush, 2009 Israel [ | Intervention | Retrospective cohort study | 542 | 5 | 78 (3) (66%) | Geriatrician, PCP | Geriatrician lead CGA | N/A | Geriatrician proposal (unspecified method) | PCP follow-up with advice as required from geriatrician |
| Phelan, 2007 United States [ | Intervention Control | Randomised control trial | 433 441 | 31 | 81 (5) [65%] | Geriatrician, gerontology ANP, gerontology pharmacist, PCP | ANP lead CGA Pharmacist medication review | ANP and geriatrician clinical review and care plan development with patient | Geriatrician and PCP face-to-face meeting | One follow-up appointment with ANP Ongoing as required telephone follow-up by ANP for ≤ 48 months |
Fenton, 2006 United States [ | Intervention Control | Retrospective matched cohort study | 146 437 | 4 | 78 (8) [66%] | Geriatrician, PCP | Geriatrician lead CGA | Geriatrician and patient collaborative problem solving | Geriatrician and PCP weekly face-to face meeting and consultation letter | PCP follow-up with advice as required from geriatrician |
| Lea, 2017 United Kingdom [ | Intervention | Feasibility study | 186 | 17 | Median age 81 (range 65–99) [59%] | Geriatrician, PCP | Geriatrician lead CGA | N/A | Geriatrician and PCP face-to-face meeting at end of session | PCP follow-up Phone advice as required from geriatrician for ≤ 1 year |
CGA comprehensive geriatric assessment, ANP advanced nurse practitioner, PCP primary care physician
Secondary outcome data from included studies
| Author of paper | Quality assessment | Comparator to CGA Intervention | Secondary outcomes and results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hermush [ | 19 | Participant baseline (6 months pre-intervention) | Medication management: 68.5% of recommendations implemented ( |
| Phelan [ | 24 | Control group receiving usual care | Acceptability of intervention: PCP satisfaction responses − 79% felt improved own management; 80% felt should be present in every clinic Acute care admission: intervention = 18.2% vs. control = 16.4% ( Mortality: Intervention (I) 11.4% vs. control (C) 7.1% ( |
| Fenton [ | 20 | Control group receiving usual care | Cost–benefit: intervention vs. control −26% lower ( Acute care admission: intervention vs. control—conditional IRR 0.57 ( Mortality: rate ratio = 1.12 (CI 0.52–2.40) |
| Lea [ | 19 | Participant baseline (6 months pre-intervention) | Acceptability of intervention: PCP and patient satisfaction—positive qualitative feedback Medication management: 6 months 72% of recommendations implemented; by 12 months 65% Acute care admission: IRR 1.83 (CI 1.43–2.34) Mortality: 14.5% at 12 months |
Quality of papers as assessed using Downs and Black assessment tool
CGA comprehensive geriatric assessment, PCP primary care physician