Integrated care for older adults living with frailty
Integrated care for older adults living with frailty
Provision of health and social care to our ageing population is one of the biggest challenges faced by health care systems today. Older adults living with frailty have complex care needs secondary to multimorbidity, polypharmacy, physical dysfunction as well as social and psychological factors. Consequently, they are often subject to disjointed and fragmented care that carries a high predisposition to lower treatment and care plan adherence as well as more adverse drug reactions. The main principle for delivering effective integrated care is through a patient-centred approach, with improved co-ordination amongst health care professionals. By minimising variation in the approach to care delivery, patient care and experience can improve. Favourable outcomes from integrated care models depends on the application of multicomponent strategies with vertical and horizontal integration of objectives identified by shared decision making and Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment. In this brief review, we describe frailty; the methods used for screening and discuss successful models of integrated care.
Mathew, Jini
7221f5a5-7b1c-407f-9a0d-38773a733f09
Patel, Harnish
e1c0826f-d14e-49f3-8049-5b945d185523
22 October 2021
Mathew, Jini
7221f5a5-7b1c-407f-9a0d-38773a733f09
Patel, Harnish
e1c0826f-d14e-49f3-8049-5b945d185523
Abstract
Provision of health and social care to our ageing population is one of the biggest challenges faced by health care systems today. Older adults living with frailty have complex care needs secondary to multimorbidity, polypharmacy, physical dysfunction as well as social and psychological factors. Consequently, they are often subject to disjointed and fragmented care that carries a high predisposition to lower treatment and care plan adherence as well as more adverse drug reactions. The main principle for delivering effective integrated care is through a patient-centred approach, with improved co-ordination amongst health care professionals. By minimising variation in the approach to care delivery, patient care and experience can improve. Favourable outcomes from integrated care models depends on the application of multicomponent strategies with vertical and horizontal integration of objectives identified by shared decision making and Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment. In this brief review, we describe frailty; the methods used for screening and discuss successful models of integrated care.
Text
INTCAR_Vol9_PatelMatthew updated article AH review HPP 170921
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 22 October 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 October 2021
Published date: 22 October 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 452643
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452643
ISSN: 2666-8696
PURE UUID: 39f3ff96-d90d-44be-8a40-5629371d7fc2
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 11 Dec 2021 11:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:56
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Jini Mathew
Author:
Harnish Patel
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics