Annals of internal medicine
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As many as 45% to 80% of nursing home residents have pain that contributes materially to functional impairment and decreased quality of life. Substantial barriers, including a high frequency of dementia, multiple pain problems, and increased sensitivity to drug side effects often make pain assessment and management more difficult in the nursing home setting. Logistic problems in carrying out diagnostic procedures and management interventions are also common. ⋯ Elderly nursing home residents are more sensitive to the side effects associated with many analgesic drugs, but this does not justify the failure to treat pain, especially in those who are terminally ill or near the end of life. Structured programs for routine pain assessment and treatment are needed. Physician involvement in pain assessment and management is necessary if pain control is to be improved for nursing home patients.
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Advance planning for future illness should be broadened from medical care in the event of incompetence to all medical care for the elderly. To plan effectively, patients need an assessment of their overall medical condition: whether they are robust, frail, demented, or dying. ⋯ Given information about their circumstances and their capacity to withstand medical interventions, patients, together with their physicians, need to formulate broad goals for medical care. There are significant barriers to implementing this scheme, but pressure from patients, structural changes in the practice of medicine that create incentives for planning, and educational strategies, including videotaped interviews and role-playing exercises, can facilitate this form of preventive medicine.
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To review the literature on the causes, epidemiology, prevention, and treatment of pressure ulcers in nursing homes and to summarize this information for clinicians caring for nursing home residents. ⋯ Pressure ulcers in the nursing home are common problems associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Because resident characteristics can identify residents likely to develop ulcers, preventive measures can be implemented early. Therapy for advanced stages of pressure ulcers is expensive and prolonged. Involvement of the physician with the multidisciplinary nursing home team is essential for prevention and therapy.
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To 1) consider the problem of sudden death from heart disease and the role of beta-blockers and other agents in preventing sudden death and 2) review perceived problems with beta-blocker therapy, such as effects on blood lipids, complications in diabetes, and adverse effects on heart failure and quality of life. ⋯ Clinicians should reappraise the evidence for the significant effect of beta-blockers on morbidity and mortality, and they should recognize the importance of initiating and maintaining beta-blocker therapy when the less well-informed might suggest otherwise.