Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment Flashcards
What does CGA stand for?
Comprehensive geriatric assessment
What is CGA?
CGA = a process to assess and manage disruption to health in older people with frailty
What is redundancy?
Redundancy = ability to deal with environmental stress, loss of system redundancy leads to decreased resilience to overcome environmental stress
Age related decline leads to what?
Age related decline leads to:
- Impairment of organ function
- Breakdown of complex interplay between organ systems (dyshomeostasis)
- Causing increases susceptibility to environmental stress (frailty)
Multi-morbidity increases with age
What are different ways to identify someone as frail?
- Frailty index
- 1 point for each impairment/disease on large list
- Frailty phenotype
- 3 of 5 criteria – unintentional weight loss, exhaustion, weak grip strength, slow walking speed, low physical activity
- Clinical frailty scale
What are examples of ‘frailty syndromes’?
- System failure presentations - falls, immobility, delirium, functional decline
What should you ask the patient to take a ‘functional history’?
To take a functional history, ask the person similar things to what you did yourself to get up and go to work (known as ‘basics of living’ – activities of living ADL):
- Transfers
- Mobility
- Toileting
- Washing
- Dressing
- Meal preparation
- Feeding
What does ADL stand for?
Activities of daily living
Describe CGA in terms of:
- goal centred
- holistic
- multi-disciplinary
- Goal centred
- Focus on goals not problems, multi-morbidity would make this conflicting
- Holistic
- Lots of aspects to ‘health’
- Medical – reversible or irreversible, consider iatrogenic harm
- Spiritual – what’s important to patient, meaning of their life
- Psychological – mood, confidence, cognition
- Functional – mobility, activities of daily living, community living skills
- Behavioural – eating, smoking, drinking, activities, occupation
- Nutrition – poor nutrition leads to poor health and poor health leads to poor nutrition
- Environmental – housing, heating, sanitation, adaption
- Social – support networks, potential for abuse
- Societal – attitudes to ageing, technological advance, political (money, accessibility to transport)
- Frailty can be triggered by disruption to any of these aspects of ‘health’
- Lots of aspects to ‘health’
- Multi-disciplinary
- MDT assessment
- Doctors – look at medical contributors to disruption to health
- Physiotherapists – assess mobility
- Occupational therapists – assist function (ADLs)
- Nurses – provide care and assessment over longer period of time
- Others can be involved such as pharmacists, social work, speech and language therapists, dieticians
- MDT meetings and communication
- Come up with plan to be able to get patient to stage where they can be discharged (when risks of hospital outweighs benefits or when goals have been met)
- Recognise that 10% of geriatrics patients at any time will die in the ward
- MDT assessment
What does goal cented mean?
Focus on goals not problems
What are the different aspects of holistic care?
- Lots of aspects to ‘health’
- Medical – reversible or irreversible, consider iatrogenic harm
- Spiritual – what’s important to patient, meaning of their life
- Psychological – mood, confidence, cognition
- Functional – mobility, activities of daily living, community living skills
- Behavioural – eating, smoking, drinking, activities, occupation
- Nutrition – poor nutrition leads to poor health and poor health leads to poor nutrition
- Environmental – housing, heating, sanitation, adaption
- Social – support networks, potential for abuse
- Societal – attitudes to ageing, technological advance, political (money, accessibility to transport)
- Frailty can be triggered by disruption to any of these aspects of ‘health’
What are hospital risks and benefits for frail people?
- Benefits
- Access to clinical expertise
- Access to complex tests and interventions
- Rapid access to supervised care support
- Risks
- Disorientation and delirium
- Learned dependency
- Deconditioning
- Iatrogenic harm
- HAI