Elderly Patients do Not Receive the Same Care as Younger Counterparts

As elderly citizens represent a growing proportion of the population, trauma centers are being challenged to provide them with the same quality of care that younger patients receive during a medical emergency. A recent study by researchers using the American College of Surgeons National Trauma Databank published in the Annals of Surgery reveals that trauma centers that excel in the care of severely injured young patients do not necessarily provide the same quality of care to elderly ones.

The study also cited growing evidence that elderly injured patients have unique needs and helped the investigators identify some ways in which trauma centers can improve their care of the elderly. The researchers analyzed data on 87,754 trauma patients of all ages treated at 132 facilities.

The study compared the performance of these 132 facilities, and identified centers with both the highest and lowest death rates. When patients in all age groups were studied together, 14 centers were high performers, with lower than expected rates of death. When young and elderly patients were considered separately, seven centers were high performers for young patients, and nine were high performers for the elderly. However, there was little overlap: only two centers were high performers for both the young and the elderly.

“In the study we showed that although some centers demonstrate high performance overall, these same centers might not be providing the same high-quality care to the elderly,” Barbara Haas, MD, of St. Michael’s Hospital, University of Toronto, stated in a press release. “We’ve shown that elderly patients have different needs from young patients. Centers need to focus on the needs of the elderly specifically in order to improve their quality of care.”

Many trauma centers got their start in the 1980s in response to drug-related violence and then developed more experience caring for car crash victims, two types of injuries that primarily involve young adults, according to lead investigator Avery B. Nathens, MD, PhD, FACS, of St. Michael’s Hospital, University of Toronto.

The researchers found that elderly patients seen in trauma centers were mostly women and were more likely to have blunt injury, specifically from falls. Severe head and leg injuries were also more predominant in the elderly.

Nathens pointed to two potential approaches that may lead to better results among elderly trauma patients. One involves putting intensive care patients under the care of an intensive care specialist, or an intensivist, once he or she is moved from the emergency room to the intensive care unit. The second involves more frequent use of the expertise of geriatricians who specialize in the care of the elderly.

“The collaboration between a trauma surgeon, intensivist and a geriatric specialist would provide all the critical resources to ensure the best possible care for these patients,” Nathens said. “These factors, along with an understanding that these patients have unique needs, would go a long way to improving their quality of care.”

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