Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
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To determine the level of agreement between the primary caregiver's report on patient activities of daily living (ADLs) and ADLs assessed directly in a sample of patients affected by very mild and mild dementia and to assess whether this agreement is influenced by the caregiver's depressive symptoms and burden. ⋯ With the exception of motor performance (walking), the caregiver's report and the performance-based assessment of functional status measure different aspects of a patient's functional status. Contrasts between the caregiver's report and observed ADL performance in mildly and very mildly demented patients are influenced by the caregiver's burden.
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Although age-related mortality after intensive care unit (ICU) admission has been studied, functional recovery for different age groups following ICU admission is not well characterized. We hypothesized that compared with younger age groups, fewer patients older than age 65 admitted to an ICU would regain their full prehospitalization functional ability and that their recovery would be slower than that of younger patients. ⋯ Older people had worse functional ability at ICU admission, but the proportion of older people who recovered and their rate of recovery was the same as for younger people. Baseline functional status, rather than abnormal physiologic status (as measured by APACHE II) on admission, was the major determinant of recovery, whereas APACHE II was the main correlate of mortality. Together, baseline function and physiologic status provide valuable complementary information for clinically relevant outcomes following an ICU admission.
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Among the high risk groups for complications from influenza and pneumococcal disease, individuals aged 65 and older hospitalized within the previous year represent the group at highest risk. Studies have demonstrated that targeting hospitalized patients aged 65 and older for immunization before hospital discharge can be successful. This study addressed the efficacy of such a program within a managed care organization to immunize this highest risk group. ⋯ Well-coordinated and timely attempts to encourage primary care physicians to immunize patients 65 years and older before hospital discharge were unsuccessful in our study. Rather than working with physicians, it may be that managed care organizations should work directly with hospitals to implement influenza and pneumococcal immunization programs.
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To identify the causes of dizziness in older patients presenting to the general practitioner and the clinical characteristics at presentation that might guide the general practitioner to the likely cause of dizziness and the most appropriate specialty for subsequent referral if referral is required. ⋯ Clinical characteristics can predict an attributable cause of dizziness in most older patients and thus guide general practitioners in treatment and appropriate specialist referral. The presence of syncope, falls, or cardiovascular comorbidity increases the likelihood of a cardiovascular diagnosis. Otolaryngological investigations are rarely diagnostic, but vertiginous symptoms do predict peripheral vestibular disorders.
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To determine characteristics associated with site of death in a cohort of long-term homecare patients. ⋯ Even among a subgroup of older persons receiving community-based long-term care, the frequency of home death is low. The finding of an association between functional, social, and disease status and site of death suggests that the relationship between these factors and patients' preferences and care needs must be examined in order to understand how to optimize the site of terminal care.