http://www.today.com/health/happy-today-carrying-when-alzheimers-strikes-early-2D79797508
This article emphasizes that life goes on even after getting an undesirable diagnosis. Hope this helps people think about the possibility of finding happiness in the moment.
Friday, June 13, 2014
Thursday, May 1, 2014
Not a "sexy" specialty?
When I tell lay people I am a geriatrician, I often get a quizzical look and need to explain that I am a doctor for older adults. When medical students come to work with us, I often find they are not enchanted by our field, which is among the least flashy of them all.
So, imagine my surprise to see this . . .
as a DJ set up for the night at a local restaurant. A friend actually pointed out to me that he was DJ [Dementia]. I guess we may be hipper than we realize.
So, imagine my surprise to see this . . .
as a DJ set up for the night at a local restaurant. A friend actually pointed out to me that he was DJ [Dementia]. I guess we may be hipper than we realize.
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Middle of the Road
Too much money to qualify for Medicaid,
not enough money to qualify without it.
Looking, searching for a facility, a
place to live until you die.
The fancy place says no. You can’t prove
your monetary worth, can’t prove you will give them a check every month… until…
eternity.
The modest place says no. You will cost
them too much. You have too many needs. And you can’t prove you will give them
a check every month…
Until
you have no more money to give and the Government
Takes
Over.
So you wait. Without a home to go to.
Without a place to live. Moving between rooms and buildings, between facilities
and hospitals.
Until
you are broke
Or
you die
Whichever
comes first.
Friday, April 18, 2014
When the best medicine is less medicine
A majority
of our medical education is devoted to the rote memorization of medical facts
and than later to the practical application of that knowledge. As an internist
this commonly involves the use of various medicines for treatment of ailments.
However we must always be vigilant of when stopping medicine may be the best
approach.
I recently
established care with a 87 year old woman who had recently moved to the area to
be closer to her daughter. By outward
appearance she was a healthy highly functioning individual. After a brief
discussion she handed me her medication list, which included 18 different
medications and vitamins, many of which are scheduled three times a day or four
times a day. After a brief discussion it became apparent the woman was under a
tremendous amount of distress from the expense of the medications and
difficulty of keeping medications straight. Additionally on review of systems
she voiced many complaints that could easily be related to several of her
medications.
Although to
any practitioner it was very clear that the patient needed to have some of the
medications stopped this discussion can be much harder than expected. After getting
push back from the patient and her daughter on stopping any medications we were
able to stop only one medication at that visit with the plan to follow-up next
month and evaluate if she noticed any changes.
-- Andrew Illif
-- Andrew Illif
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Discrepancy between percentage of time Residents spend in the hospital training and percentage of time patients spend in the hospital
I have been thinking about the discrepancy between
percentage of time Internal Medicine Residents spend in the hospital training
and percentage of time our patients spend in the hospital.
My patient with the most hospitalizations this year is Mrs S.
She has had 8 hospitalizations adding up to about 1016 hours in the hospital. She
is definitely an extreme outlier in
terms of frequent hospitalizations and yet she has spent 88% of her time OUT of
the hospital. This is in contrast to the
resident who has spent 75% of his training IN the hospital this year
(approximately 2304 hours in the hospital and 768 hours training in the
outpatient setting). His inpatient learning is intense and he is well equipped to
take care of the very sick patients in that setting. But our patients (with rare exceptions) spend
proportionately very little time in the hospital.
Would patients get better care if residents had more
exposure to the patients’ out of hospital environments? Here are a couple of
examples where knowledge of the patient’s environments would probably decrease
unnecessary interventions and cost.
We couldn’t seem to keep Mrs B out of the hospital. She had
repeated asthma exacerbations and was hospitalized 11 times in one year. Each
time, she was treated appropriately and sent home but the scenario repeated
about every month. When we thoughtfully reviewed
her home setting, we discovered her twenty-something year old grandkids would come
over and smoke in her house. After having them stop smoking in her house, the
next year she was not hospitalized once!
When doing a home assessment, I found Mr G compliant with
all of his meds but the only food he had in the kitchen was some neck bones
stewing. He said he couldn’t afford more food because his medications were so
expensive. We realized that he really didn’t need all of the meds he had been
prescribed and others could be switched to less expensive formulations.
Then there was the lady with advanced dementia who during an
admission for urosepsis, was deemed to have a high aspiration risk and ended up
with a feeding tube. In retrospect, she was always in bed in the hospital and
attempts at feeding were made when she was in this suboptimal position. When I
visited her at home after the hospitalization, she was up in her chair bright
eyed and smiling after finishing a whole breakfast of ooey-gooey pancakes and
maple syrup. Instead of making a decision about tube feeding in the hospital
while sick, it would have been preferable to have her go back to her own environment
to assess.
Have you ever seen a home set up like a nursing home? We
just saw one today—the daughter has a bedroom set up PERFECTLY with a bed,
supplies, shelving unit and pictures on the wall but free of clutter. As we
watched her, we saw that she has trained herself to be as good as any practical
nurse I’ve ever seen. The patient has been very stable so she doesn’t qualify
for hospice care though we are still giving her palliative/hospice-like care.
While financial incentives push us to teach in the hospital,
I but I think residents could be better doctors by exposing them to where the
patient spends most of their time and helping them to consider this when they
are in the hospital.
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Understanding the disease
How many times have you been at church or social
functions and witnessed that “little old lady” that is running the show? From
party planning to organizing the Christmas plays to cooking dinners for 30+
people, my grandmother has always been that person. I often compared her to geriatric patients in
my medicine clinic and thought, “how does she do it?” No one in my very large family was prepared
for the day when she suddenly was no longer able to juggle it all.
My grandmother had a very difficult 2013 that all started
with her having back surgery. She had
undergone multiple back and other joint surgeries in the past and always seemed
to be back on her feet within days (so everyone thought this time would be no
different). Unfortunately, following a
very lengthy procedure, my grandmother woke up and really didn’t know
anyone. Her husband of 50 years, her 4
children, the multiple grandchildren, and even great grandchildren that she
often babysat, were only intermittently recognized. At first, I assumed (from 100s of miles away)
that she just had hospital delirium. I
received calls almost daily from my very distraught mother asking “what is
wrong with her?” and “is she going to get better?” The longer my grandmother was hospitalized and
as the confusion persisted, the less clear those answers became. The decision was made to take her home after
about 2 weeks as we all hoped that she would improve after being back home in
her normal environment. This unfortunately
was not the case, she actually declined – screaming all night in pain, became
incontinent of stool and urine, and completely exhausted my poor grandfather
that was trying to take care of her.
There was no medical background in the family and this situation with my
grandmother was not being handled well.
Some blamed my grandmother – they felt that she was “faking”. Others blamed her pain medications (to the
point that they essentially took all of them from her). Everyone started to fight, cry, and many
stopped visiting or communicating. My
grandfather on multiple nights took my grandmother to our local hospital
because he did not know what to do with her.
The last night that he took her she was septic and transferred back to
the original surgeon who did her surgery.
She was found to an abscess at the level of her new spinal hardware so
AGAIN had to go back to surgery. On one
hand, everyone was relieved that maybe the infection was the problem all along
and she would now to cured!! On the other hand, here she was going through
ANOTHER surgery. Following the surgery
my grandmother’s memory did improve some, but she is certainly nowhere close to
the person she was before this all started.
The more I talked with my mother about this case; there were subtle
things that had been missed – like the fact that my grandmother had been
forgetting places and names long before her initial surgery. She likely did have some mild cognitive
impairment that certainly did not help her in the recovery phase – especially
with delirium (and superimposed infection).
My grandmother knows our family members now and is functioning quite
well at home, but constantly has to be monitored and requires quite a bit of
assistance.
This story is just one example of the impact that
cognitive impairment can have on someone and their family. It is important to accept the process of
aging and understand cognitive decline. My
family has learned a lot this year thanks to my grandmother, and finally has
taken the initiative to start learning about cognitive impairment and dementia
and how to prepare as things continue to change throughout both of my
grandparent’s lives. Educating family
members and patients about what to expect is clearly important in the case
above, and something that I have noticed to be emphasized often during my month
on geriatrics.
-- Lindsey Prochaska
Tweaking the discharge process
During
my inpatient months I had not thought much about where the patients end up
after their stay. I know many are going to SNFs and rehabs, but I mostly
just imagined a hospital-like setting with a focus on rehab and PT instead of
on medical issues. However, during my first week of geriatrics I realized
how vastly wrong my ideas had been. The care of patients in
SNFs seems to be a cross between a hospitalist and a PCP. You get to see
the patients several times, in their normal clothes I might add, over the
course of several weeks and are able to build a relationship with them and see
(most) improve and able to return home. You also realize all the things
that fall through the cracks on discharge. The person has diarrhea? It's
good to know they don't have C.diff, but it might also be helpful stopping that
BID sennakot-s. Oh, yea lets remove that rectal tube at some point as
well. They were taking Benalopril prior to admit, lets change them to
lisinopril b/c it's formulary on discharge. They are confused, but we
don't know what the baseline is, so we cannot justify hospitalization, so lets
get them someplace where someone can keep watching
them instead of dc'ing home, it's in the best interest of the patient
after all. All of these issues, and so many more, seem kind of oxy-moron
after discharge, but while you are getting paged every 5 minutes you lose focus
on the fine-tuning. Being responsible for the discharged patient made me
so much more aware of my discharging process, and I wish I had had that
experience from the beginning of my residency.
-- Kellie Wark
-- Kellie Wark
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