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Safety and Security Issues of Aging

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Adequate toilet height. Kitchen-access to items. Smoke alarms. Clutter. Medications--?labeled ... Inability to perform a simple calculation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Safety and Security Issues of Aging


1
Safety and Security Issues of Aging
Gerontological Community Based Nursing
2
Environment
  • Older adults want to stay in their own homes
    independently as long as possible
  • Mobility, transportation and safety factors often
    affect the living patterns of older adults

3
Why do older adults change living conditions?
  • Death of a spouse
  • Divorce
  • Change in economic circumstances
  • Loss of health
  • ? d cognitive or functional status
  • Availability of family
  • Personal preference
  • 6.5 million older adults need assistance with
    daily living

4
Staying at home
  • Most common chronic conditions affecting older
    adults
  • Arthritis
  • HTN
  • Heart disease
  • Hearing impairment
  • Diabetes
  • To maintain independence, we must identify needs
    and appropriate interventions

5
Home
  • Approximately 70 of older adults live in family
    setting
  • 4-6 live in a nursing home
  • 78 of older householders owned their home
  • 22 are renters

6
Assisted Living
  • Fastest growing type of senior housing in the US
  • Goal is to maintain or enhance the frail elders
    capabilities to remain as independent as possible

7
Homelessness
  • Housing needs of homeless elders are often
    ignored
  • Older people who are homeless as a result of
    uncontrollable circumstance and dont receive a
    range of services and support

8
Safety and Security Issues
  • Crime
  • Safety
  • Driving
  • Involved in more motor vehicle accidents than
    younger people
  • Sensory and cognitive changes have adverse
    effects on driving ability
  • Fall Risk

9
Falls
  • 30 of community based older adults fall each
    year
  • Most falls occur in the home
  • Key areas to assess
  • Adequate lighting and access to switches
  • Safe flooringlook for cords
  • Safe stairways
  • Adequate toilet height
  • Kitchen-access to items
  • Smoke alarms
  • Clutter
  • Medications--?labeled
  • Safety of neighborhood
  • Distance to bathroom
  • Ease of getting in/out of chair

10
Transportation
  • Transportation assessed as part of IADL
  • 0independent, drives a car
  • 1arranges own transport, depends on others
    except for walking
  • 3assists in own transport but needs special
    accommodation e.g. wheelchair
  • 5completely homebound even for medical care

11
Alternatives to Driving
  • Reduced-fare taxis
  • Volunteer drivers
  • Public transportation
  • Chartered buses
  • Dial-a-ride programs

12
Musculoskeletal Problems
  • Mobility Problems, Falls, and Fractures
  • Functional elements needed for mobility
  • Cognition and motivation
  • Skeletal system
  • Muscular system
  • Neurological system

13
Mobility changes with aging
  • Loss of bone mass
  • After age 40-50 there is incremental process of
    bone absorption without new bone formation gt
    gradual bone loss
  • Loss of muscle strength
  • Decrease of reaction time
  • Decreased speed of movement

14
Common health problems affecting mobility in
older adults
  • Osteoporosis
  • Osteomalacia
  • Arthritis
  • Polymyalgia rheumatica
  • Fibromyalgia
  • Foot disorders

15
Falls
  • 2nd leading cause of all accidental deaths
  • Important health issue in those gt75
    y.oespecially women
  • Causes
  • Physical frailty, visual impairment
  • Environmental hazards
  • Most occur during the day
  • Previous falls, predictor of future falls

16
Nursing Diagnoses
  • Injury, risk for related to falls
  • Mobility, impaired physical
  • Goals prevent injury, promote optimum mobility,
    prevent deformity
  • Interventions assistive devices, maintain
    adequate nutrition fluid intake maintain
    normal elimination

17
Fractures
  • Hip fractures have high morbidity and mortality
  • 15-20 of patients die as a result of
    complications
  • Immobility
  • Pneumonia
  • Sepsis/UTI
  • Pressure ulcers

18
Pain
  • Definition
  • Unpleasant sensory and emotional experience
    associated with actual or potential tissue damage
  • Whatever the patient says it is.
  • Incidence
  • 25-50 of community-based elders have pain
  • Up to 85 for long-term care residents report
    pain
  • 73 of hospitalized medical patients say pain was
    excruciating

19
Pain Assessment
  • Pain too
  • Pain descriptions
  • Pain observation

20
Pharmacological Management of Pain
  • Medications to be avoided in older adults
  • Demerol
  • Causes confusion
  • Talwin
  • Confusion, disorientation
  • Methadone
  • Long half-life accumulates over time
  • Darvon
  • confusion

21
Rule of Thumb
  • Start Low
  • Go Slow

22
Nurses and Pain
  • Nurses fear addicting patients, fear giving
    narcotics, give less than prescribed dose or
    minimal doses
  • Result Patients suffer!!
  • Nurses underestimate patients pain
  • Result Patients suffer!!
  • Nurses make incorrect assumptions about pts pain
    because pts do not behave according to nurses
    expectations
  • Result Patients suffer!!
  • Nurses and patients believe that pain is a
    natural part of aging
  • Result Patients suffer!!

23
Nonpharmacologic Management of Pain
  • Touch
  • Natural method of comforting, promotes
    relaxation, said to promote healing
  • Relaxation
  • Meditation
  • Imagery
  • Massage
  • Heat/cold
  • Accupuncture/Accupressure
  • TENStranscutaneous electrical nerve stimulation
  • Distraction

24
Medications
  • Nursing home patients receive an average of 6
    drugs/day
  • 45 take 7 or more/day
  • 20 take more than 10/day
  • 60 of all visits to a physician for pts agegt50
    include renewal, continuation, or prescription of
    at least one medication
  • Prescription use increases with age
  • One in 13 prescriptions received from office
    based physicians involves a potentially
    inappropriate medication

25
Polypharmacy
  • The excessive use or unnecessary medications with
    associated increased risk of drug interactions
    and other adverse effects
  • Causes
  • Inadequate diagnosis
  • Inappropriate prescribing
  • Multiple prescribers w/out adequate communicating
  • Failure to d/c medications that are no longer
    necessary
  • Failure to agree on therapeutic endpoint
  • Inadequate or ineffective family/patient education

26
What to do
27
  • Aspirin can increase the effect of
    anticoagulants, penicillins
  • Antacids can decrease the effect of aspirin
  • Antidepressants can increase the effect of
    narcotics
  • Meperidine can decrease the effect of glaucoma
    medication

28
Adverse Drug Reactions
  • Any undesirable or unintended effect occurring
    with medication dosages
  • 2-3 times more likely to occur in older than in
    younger adults
  • Drug-drug interactions
  • Drug-nutrient interactions
  • OTCs, vitamins, and foodstuffs
  • Drug-disease interactions

29
Noncompliance
  • Non-adherence to medication prescription
  • Risk factors
  • Multiple medications
  • Recent prescription changes
  • Inability to name prescriptions
  • Multiple practitioners
  • Vision defecits
  • Inability to perform a simple calculation
  • Inability to judge an appropriate twice-daily
    dosing schedule

30
Assessment
  • Review all medications (prescriptions, OTC,
    herbal supplements, folk remedies, etc.) at least
    Q 6 months
  • What is the purpose of the drug?
  • Has the aphorism start low, go slow been
    followed?
  • Are there any patient allergies that have not
    been reported?
  • Are there drug-drug interactions that need to be
    checked?
  • Has the most effective route of administration
    been selected?

31
Assessment contd
  • Assess patient and/or family knowledge of
    medications and the ability to
  • Follow instructions
  • Monitor for adverse effects
  • Make decisions about contacting the physician
  • Assess the environment for proper storage,
    delivery systems, and memory prosthetics

32
Nursing Diagnoses
  • Noncompliance with medication regimen related to
    visual deficit
  • Self-care deficit, medication related to
    diminished cognitive functioning
  • Injury, risk for related to an adverse drug
    reaction (e.g. hypotension, dehydration,
    dizziness)

33
Nursing Interventions
  • Medication administration
  • Helping pts locate or create memory prosthetics,
    such as pill dispensers, calendars, check-off
    systems
  • Medication management
  • Understanding the therapeutic goal and the
    pathophysiology of the disease to be treated
  • Using this goal for monitoring the efficacy of
    the drug

34
Nursing Interventions contd
  • Medication prescribing
  • Nurse should recognize principles of
    pharmacoeconomics that may affect the drug
    selection behaviors of the primary care provider
  • Unit cost of the drug
  • Cost of administering the drug (special skills or
    assistance needed)
  • Costs associated with managing side effects
  • Costs associated with monitoring the patient (lab
    work, home/physician visits)

35
Nursing Interventions contd
  • Patient teaching
  • Drug names (generic and brand)
  • Drug indications
  • Dosage
  • When and how to administer the medication
  • Contraindications
  • Adverse effects and drug interactions
  • Storage
  • Demonstration and return demonstration
    opportunities
  • Anticipatory guidance about OTCs
  • Creating a portable medication record to share
    with all providers
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