Comprehensive geriatric assessment: recognition of identified geriatric conditions by community-dwelling older persons

Article

<p>OBJECTIVES: to study (i) the prevalence of geriatric conditions in community-dwelling older persons at increased risk of functional decline and (ii) the extent to which older persons recognise comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA)-identified conditions as relevant problems.</p><p>METHODS: trained registered nurses conducted a CGA in 934 out of 1209 older persons at increased risk of functional decline participating in the intervention arm of a randomised trial in the Netherlands. After screening for 32 geriatric conditions, participants were asked which of the identified geriatric conditions they recognised as relevant problems.</p><p>RESULTS: at baseline, the median age of participants was 82.9 years (interquartile range (IQR) 77.3-87.3 years). The median number of identified geriatric conditions per participant was 8 (IQR 6-11). The median number of geriatric conditions that were recognised was 1 (IQR 0-2). Functional dependency and (increased risk of) alcohol and drug dependency were the most commonly identified conditions. Pain was the most widely recognised problem.</p><p>CONCLUSION: CGA identified many geriatric conditions, of which few were recognised as a problem by the person involved. Further study is needed to better understand how older persons interact with identified geriatric conditions, in terms of perceived relevance. This may yield a more efficient CGA and further improve a patient-centred approach.</p>

Reference van Rijn, M., Suijker, J. J., Bol, W., Hoff, E., ter Riet, G., de Rooij, S. E., Moll van Charante, E. P., & Buurman, B. M. (2016). Comprehensive geriatric assessment: recognition of identified geriatric conditions by community-dwelling older persons. Age and Ageing, 45(6), 894-899. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afw157
2 November 2016

Publication date

Nov 2016

Author(s)

Jacqueline J. Suijker
Wietske Bol
Eva Hoff
Gerben ter Riet
Sophia E. de Rooij
Eric P. Moll van Charante
Bianca M. Buurman

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