The health-care system must do better at
addressing conditions that restrict how we live as we get old
By Kenneth Rockwood
Contributor
Troy Media
Contributor
Troy Media
HALIFAX, N.S. /Troy Media/ -
Should medicine be ageist?
A young trainee doctor
recently proposed to me that it should. Health care is overstretched, she
argued. "We can't do everything for everyone, so why spend money on old people,
who have little chance of benefit?"
For her, ageism is not all
that bad - in fact, it's a practical response to limited resources.
I'm unpersuaded. Ageism is not
benign. We fail older people when we treat them, as typically we do, in ways
that are at odds with how ageing works. Ageism masks our need to do
better.
The challenge is the
complexity of ageing. With age, almost all diseases become more
common.
Health care has become pretty
good at assembling teams that specialize in specific problems, creating focused,
subspecialized care.
And patients do best when
their single illness, no matter how complicated and no matter what their age, is
their main problem. Subspecialized care may work very well for
them.
But as we age, we're more
likely to have more than one illness and to take more than one medication. And
as we age, the illnesses that we have are more likely to restrict how we live -
not just outright disability, but in our moving more slowly or taking care in
where we walk, or what we wear or where we go.
Not everyone of the same age
has the same number of health problems. Those with the most health problems are
frail. And when they're frail, they do worse. Often, those with frailty do worse
because health care remains focused on single illness. Our success with a
single-illness approach has biased us to think that this is the approach we
should always take.
When frail people show up with
all their health and social problems, we see them as illegitimate or unsuited
for what we do.
So would the young doctor be
right if instead of restricting care in old people, she simply opted for
restricting care for frail people? Should frailism be the new
ageism?
For health care, such a notion
would be self-defeating. If frail patients are unsuited to the care that doctors
provide, we must provide more suitable care.
Frail older adults consume a
lot of care. Far better that those of us in the health system treat them as our
very best customers. That would improve care for everyone.
No one admitted to hospital
benefits from poor sleep, but (mostly) we get away with it in our fitter
patients. Not so in the frail, in whom it leads to worse outcomes: longer stays,
more confusion, more medications, more falls and a higher death
rate.
No one benefits from being
immobilized too long. No one benefits from not having medications reviewed, or
from poor nutrition, or inadequate pain control, or getting admitted when care
at home would be better or in not clearly discussing goals of care. Just because
the health system mostly gets away with it in fitter patients is no reason to
forego change.
Changing routines to improve
care will benefit everyone. But it won't happen if we see frailty as an
acceptable form of ageism. We need to invest in better care and in better
understanding how to design, test and implement it.
As important as subspecialties
are, by definition each subspecialty group benefits a small fraction of people.
The skills required to provide expert general care, particularly for frail older
adults, have been less celebrated. Compared to disease research, ageing and
frailty are barely on the funding radar screen.
In any guise, ageism can be
insidious. We don't have to go far to find it. I find it in myself when I'm in a
long line. It's not the science of how movement becomes slow that saves me then
- it's realizing that slowness is not a moral failing, much less one directed at
my busyness.
What we do in our health
system now fails older people who might benefit if we provided better care. In
that way, it fails us all.
Attitudes must change.
Medicine should not be ageist. It shouldn't even be frailest. We must work to
provide better care for frail older adults, especially when they are
ill.
Kenneth Rockwood is a geriatrician in Halifax, N.S., and a
researcher with Canadian Frailty Network (CFN), a not-for-profit organization
dedicated to improving care for older Canadians living with
frailty.
© 2016 Distributed by Troy
Media
No comments:
Post a Comment
id="blogfeeds"><$BlogFeedsVertical$>
id="postfeeds"><$BlogItemFeedLinks$>