Harming those we intend to help: hospital-acquired complications in patients with dementia

IF 6.7 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Emily H Gordon, Ruth E Hubbard
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While the age-adjusted incidence of dementia is declining, longer lives mean that the prevalence, and consequently the burden of disability, are increasing.<span><sup>2</sup></span> In Australia, the number of people living with dementia is predicted to more than double, to about 850 000 people, by 2058.<span><sup>3</sup></span> This rise will pose a substantial challenge for hospitals, which are largely designed to meet the needs of robust patients with single, biological disorders rather than frail patients with complex biopsychosocial problems, such as dementia.</p><p>In this issue of the <i>MJA</i>, Ní Chróinín and colleagues<span><sup>4</sup></span> assessed the risk of harm to older patients with dementia admitted to five hospitals in southwestern Sydney during 2010–2020. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Life expectancy has increased around the world, but healthy life expectancy has not kept pace.1 Dementia is one of the chronic diseases responsible for this discrepancy. While the age-adjusted incidence of dementia is declining, longer lives mean that the prevalence, and consequently the burden of disability, are increasing.2 In Australia, the number of people living with dementia is predicted to more than double, to about 850 000 people, by 2058.3 This rise will pose a substantial challenge for hospitals, which are largely designed to meet the needs of robust patients with single, biological disorders rather than frail patients with complex biopsychosocial problems, such as dementia.

In this issue of the MJA, Ní Chróinín and colleagues4 assessed the risk of harm to older patients with dementia admitted to five hospitals in southwestern Sydney during 2010–2020. Among the 217 000 hospitalised patients aged 60 years or older, 11 393 patients with dementia were matched with control patients without dementia, using a propensity score based on key clinical and demographic factors. The characteristics of the well matched cohort were consistent with being a frail patient group: matched patients were older and more likely to be women, to have two or more medical conditions, and to have a history of falls than unmatched patients without dementia.

The key finding by Author and colleagues was that dementia is an independent risk factor for several hospital-acquired complications, including geriatric syndromes (falls, pressure injuries, delirium) and pneumonia, as well as for in-hospital death. The risks of new incontinence and malnutrition were not significantly greater for patients with dementia, but this could reflect low rates of clinical documentation and coding of these conditions, an inherent limitation for administrative data analyses. The median hospital length of stay was longer for patients with dementia than for matched patients without dementia, but it is not clear whether this is a cause or consequence of hospital-acquired complications.4

Dementia is closely linked with frailty: the risk of dementia is higher in people with frailty, and frailty increases in severity after the onset of dementia.5, 6 We have known for some time that older patients with frailty are more likely to experience hospital-acquired complications.7 Frailty reflects the progressive failure of a complex system; higher order functions, such as walking, are the first to be compromised by stressors, as they require the precise coordination of multiple physiological components. Prior and incident falls were frequently reported in the study by Ní Chróinín and colleagues.4 But why is it that patients with dementia were more than four times as likely to fall in hospital as patients without dementia? Although residual confounding by unmeasured aspects of frailty may have contributed to the difference (significant differences between patients with and without dementia in terms of mobility, functional dependence, comorbidity, sensory impairment, and other characteristics), pathways to harm that particularly affect patients with dementia are likely. For example, for some patients with dementia expressions of unmet needs and the adverse effects of restrictive practices used to manage these expressions could contribute to falls. Delirium, which often affects patients with dementia, could precipitate a cascade of complications (including falls and other geriatric syndromes) because of common sequelae of drowsiness, poor oral intake and immobility, and agitation, disturbances of circadian rhythm, and neuropsychiatric symptoms.

Many factors can precipitate or perpetuate harm to patients with dementia during hospitalisation (Box). Strong evidence suggests that multicomponent, person-centred interventions that encourage mobilisation, healthy nutrition and hydration, and socialisation,10, 11 and specialist gerontological care comprising multidisciplinary geriatric assessment and management12, 13 reduce the risks of hospital-acquired complications and other adverse outcomes for older patients, and evidence is growing for dementia-friendly environmental design of hospital wards.14 However, implementing these interventions on a large scale has been limited by inadequate investment by health services and governments, despite improved safety and quality of care for patients with dementia being defined as a national (and global) priority.15

Much can be done by hospital staff to enhance patient safety. Clinical leaders and managers can encourage staff attitudes, skills, and behaviours that promote quality care for patients with dementia. It is appropriate to acknowledge that assessing and caring for patients with dementia can be difficult: history-taking and examination can be limited, patients may be aggressive and resist care or be passive and withdrawn, and their complex problems often take longer to resolve or do not resolve at all. Pejorative labels that perpetuate a culture of discrimination and undermine care should not be tolerated, nor should therapeutic nihilism. Instead, hospital staff should be trained in person-centred dementia care and communication, and high quality care for patients with dementia should be promoted as core business.

No relevant disclosures.

Commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.

伤害我们想要帮助的人:痴呆症患者在医院获得的并发症。
1 痴呆症是造成这种差异的慢性疾病之一。1 痴呆症是造成这种差异的慢性疾病之一。虽然痴呆症的年龄调整发病率正在下降,但寿命的延长意味着发病率以及由此造成的残疾负担正在增加。在本期《医学期刊》上,Ní Chróinín 及其同事4 评估了 2010-2020 年间悉尼西南部五家医院收治的老年痴呆症患者所面临的伤害风险。在 217,000 名 60 岁或以上的住院患者中,有 11,393 名痴呆症患者与无痴呆症的对照组患者进行了配对,配对时使用了基于关键临床和人口学因素的倾向评分。与未配对的非痴呆症患者相比,配对成功的患者年龄更大,更有可能是女性,更有可能患有两种或两种以上的疾病,也更有可能有跌倒史。痴呆症患者发生新的大小便失禁和营养不良的风险并没有明显增加,但这可能反映出这些情况的临床记录和编码率较低,这是行政数据分析的固有局限性。痴呆症患者的住院时间中位数要长于非痴呆症患者,但目前尚不清楚这究竟是住院并发症的原因还是结果。4 痴呆症与体弱密切相关:体弱者患痴呆症的风险更高,痴呆症发生后体弱的严重程度也会增加、6 我们早就知道,年老体弱的病人更有可能出现医院获得性并发症。7 体弱反映了一个复杂系统的逐渐衰竭;高阶功能,如行走,首先受到压力因素的损害,因为它们需要多种生理成分的精确协调。在 Ní Chróinín 及其同事的研究中,经常会报告患者曾跌倒和发生跌倒的情况。4 但为什么痴呆症患者在医院跌倒的几率是非痴呆症患者的四倍多呢?尽管未测量的虚弱方面的残留混杂因素可能是造成这种差异的原因之一(痴呆症患者和非痴呆症患者在行动能力、功能依赖性、合并症、感官障碍和其他特征方面存在显著差异),但对痴呆症患者造成特别影响的伤害途径是可能存在的。例如,对于某些痴呆症患者来说,未满足需求的表现以及用于管理这些表现的限制性措施所产生的不良影响可能会导致患者跌倒。谵妄通常会影响痴呆症患者,由于嗜睡、口腔摄入不足、行动不便、躁动、昼夜节律紊乱和神经精神症状等常见后遗症,可能会引发一系列并发症(包括跌倒和其他老年综合症)。有力的证据表明,以人为本的多成分干预措施可以鼓励行动、健康的营养和水合以及社交10、11,而由多学科老年医学评估和管理组成的老年医学专科护理12、13 则可以降低老年患者在医院获得并发症和其他不良后果的风险,而且越来越多的证据表明,医院病房的环境设计应有利于痴呆症患者。然而,尽管改善痴呆症患者的护理安全和质量已被列为国家(和全球)的优先事项,但由于医疗服务机构和政府的投资不足,这些干预措施的大规模实施一直受到限制。临床领导者和管理者可以鼓励员工在态度、技能和行为上促进对痴呆症患者的优质护理。应该承认,评估和护理痴呆症患者可能会有一定的困难:病史采集和检查可能会受到限制,患者可能会攻击性地抗拒护理或消极退缩,他们的复杂问题往往需要更长的时间才能解决或根本无法解决。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Medical Journal of Australia
Medical Journal of Australia 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
410
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Medical Journal of Australia (MJA) stands as Australia's foremost general medical journal, leading the dissemination of high-quality research and commentary to shape health policy and influence medical practices within the country. Under the leadership of Professor Virginia Barbour, the expert editorial team at MJA is dedicated to providing authors with a constructive and collaborative peer-review and publication process. Established in 1914, the MJA has evolved into a modern journal that upholds its founding values, maintaining a commitment to supporting the medical profession by delivering high-quality and pertinent information essential to medical practice.
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