2025年左右急诊科走廊的登机:为什么老年患者应该得到更好的照顾。

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Jesse M. Pines, Raj M. Ratwani, Edward R. Melnick
{"title":"2025年左右急诊科走廊的登机:为什么老年患者应该得到更好的照顾。","authors":"Jesse M. Pines,&nbsp;Raj M. Ratwani,&nbsp;Edward R. Melnick","doi":"10.1111/jgs.19602","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Over the past three decades, the hospital practice of emergency department (ED) boarding and the crowding that results from it have been regularly and consistently named as a public health crisis. Yet, despite repeated stakeholder discussions and engagement, no broad policy solutions nor durable, structural changes in ED care have addressed the ED boarding crisis and its negative effect on patient care and outcomes in a meaningful way. Recent evidence has shown that the problem has worsened substantially since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic [<span>1</span>].</p><p>A missing element in these repeated calls for action is the lived experience of geriatric ED boarders. A study in this issue of the <i>Journal of the American Geriatric Society</i> performed at the Massachusetts General Hospital titled “Hallways Feel Like Homelessness,” fills that gap [<span>2</span>]. It offers an insightful look into the experience and perceptions of geriatric ED boarders—ill older adults admitted to the hospital who experienced long delays in the ED to be transferred to their inpatient beds.</p><p>The study presents a qualitative analysis of 26 patients aged 65 and older who boarded in the ED for at least 4 h. The mean age of participants was 77 years. Through their own words, the authors present a window into a world where stretchers become beds, noise replaces rest, and naked vulnerability is on display. The authors found that patients were not just distressed by their long waits. Geriatric ED boarders felt powerless, exposed, and forgotten. For some, boarding in a hallway was likened to being homeless or imprisoned. One participant described the experience as being “in exile.” The irony of this sentiment should not be lost when considering the origin of the word <i>hospital</i>, from French and medieval Latin, meaning a place of reception for guests, with the words, hotel and hostel, coming from the same origin. Given this origin, the lack of hospitality in the hospital described in this study is disturbing.</p><p>The hospital practice of ED boarding is not just about a lack of creature comforts. Nearly 20 years of literature have found the practice to be directly harmful to the ill and injured—linked to increased delirium, longer hospitalizations, and higher mortality [<span>3-5</span>]. The deleterious effects are magnified in vulnerable older adults [<span>6</span>]. The voices in this study tell us something the quantitative study data cannot: how older patients internalize these conditions, what they observe, and what they fear. Geriatric ED boarders are starkly aware of being placed in locations that lack basic safety features—no call bells, no privacy, and sometimes not even food.</p><p>A notable study finding was that participants did not blame their doctors or nurses. They reserved their criticism for the physical environment and the hospital systems that tolerate it. This distinction is vital. The healthcare workforce is compassionate and dedicated. Yet compassion does not compensate for a broken system. Clinical care that follows established guidelines delivered in a chaotic corridor is still just hallway care.</p><p>Boarding is often framed as an ED issue. It is not. It is a hospital throughput problem, a staffing problem, and a resource allocation problem [<span>7</span>]. Hospitals that prioritize their elective surgeries over acutely ill ED patients exacerbate boarding [<span>8</span>]. Nursing shortages and inpatient bed closures widen the gap. EDs are the pressure valve for a system that no longer has slack.</p><p>The findings of this study underscore that improving the care experience for geriatric ED boarders requires both a combination of a structural overhaul in the incentives hospitals face as well as the rapid promotion of interventions to improve the patient experience and mitigate quality issues during the hospital admission process. Many highly effective interventions exist to reduce boarding that can be implemented throughout the hospital [<span>9</span>]. Yet many hospitals have not implemented them nor effectively addressed their boarding problem.</p><p>The study found that one specific, targeted solution can yield meaningful change: a dedicated ED boarder unit, which was present in the ED during the study period. There, a quieter, more structured environment with lights dimmed at night, access to call bells, and attentive staff restored patient dignity and agency, to some degree. This suggests that modest environmental improvements in the ED could have outsized impacts on patient experience and well-being. Study participants consistently viewed this approach as more humane and tolerable than lying in hallway spaces.</p><p>Another area highlighted in the study was the idea to prioritize older adult patients for available beds, specifically those who are more likely to be harmed by the ED boarding. Realigning hospital reimbursement for older adults could incorporate validated assessments of frailty, cognitive impairment, and clinical acuity. This aligns with geriatric medicine principles and was strongly endorsed by participants in the study. With the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Age-Friendly Hospital Measure now promoting frailty and cognitive screening as one element of care, hospitals may have more of a regulatory impetus to use these data not only for documentation, but also for actionable triage decisions.</p><p>Broader scale, policy interventions are needed to drive accountability and ultimately durable change in the rising boarding in America's hospitals. Public reporting of boarding times is one idea that may drive action. Metrics of boarding are now being piloted by the Leapfrog Group. Additionally, accreditation standards that prohibit prolonged hallway care, and payment models that incentivize efficient throughput (rather than elective volume) could shift hospital priorities. CMS could consider time-based reimbursement penalties for excessive ED boarding, especially for high-risk populations like older adults.</p><p>Finally, we cannot escape the ethical dimensions that emerged from this study. If we accept that older adults are more likely to be harmed by boarding and less able to advocate for themselves, then continuing the status quo becomes indefensible. The hallway becomes not just a holding zone but a mirror reflecting our system's values. Most hospitals' mission statements emphasize the value of respect, underscoring the importance of treating patients with dignity. The practice of ED boarding systemically erodes such values.</p><p>Study participants were stoic, even forgiving of this. But stoicism should not be confused with acceptance. As one participant put it: “That's the way it is… but it's not really a good experience.” We owe our patients more than the inevitability of indignity.</p><p>As health systems work to address boarding and improve efficiency, we must keep geriatric voices front and center. This study reminds us that people are more than patients—they are observers, critics, and philosophers of their own care. These findings present multiple new themes and factors that deserve hypothesis-generating quantitative analysis. Their insights are not soft data; they are moral guideposts in a system too often built for convenience and economics rather than compassion.</p><p>J.M.P. wrote the initial draft of the editorial. R.M.R. and E.R.M. provide copyedits. All authors approved the final manuscript.</p><p>The authors declare no conflicts of interest.</p><p>This publication is linked to a related article by Perelman et al. To view this article, visit https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.19518.</p>","PeriodicalId":17240,"journal":{"name":"Journal of the American Geriatrics Society","volume":"73 8","pages":"2331-2332"},"PeriodicalIF":4.5000,"publicationDate":"2025-06-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://agsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/jgs.19602","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Boarding in Emergency Department Hallways Circa 2025: Why Older Adult Patients Deserve Better\",\"authors\":\"Jesse M. Pines,&nbsp;Raj M. Ratwani,&nbsp;Edward R. Melnick\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/jgs.19602\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Over the past three decades, the hospital practice of emergency department (ED) boarding and the crowding that results from it have been regularly and consistently named as a public health crisis. Yet, despite repeated stakeholder discussions and engagement, no broad policy solutions nor durable, structural changes in ED care have addressed the ED boarding crisis and its negative effect on patient care and outcomes in a meaningful way. Recent evidence has shown that the problem has worsened substantially since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic [<span>1</span>].</p><p>A missing element in these repeated calls for action is the lived experience of geriatric ED boarders. A study in this issue of the <i>Journal of the American Geriatric Society</i> performed at the Massachusetts General Hospital titled “Hallways Feel Like Homelessness,” fills that gap [<span>2</span>]. It offers an insightful look into the experience and perceptions of geriatric ED boarders—ill older adults admitted to the hospital who experienced long delays in the ED to be transferred to their inpatient beds.</p><p>The study presents a qualitative analysis of 26 patients aged 65 and older who boarded in the ED for at least 4 h. The mean age of participants was 77 years. Through their own words, the authors present a window into a world where stretchers become beds, noise replaces rest, and naked vulnerability is on display. The authors found that patients were not just distressed by their long waits. Geriatric ED boarders felt powerless, exposed, and forgotten. For some, boarding in a hallway was likened to being homeless or imprisoned. One participant described the experience as being “in exile.” The irony of this sentiment should not be lost when considering the origin of the word <i>hospital</i>, from French and medieval Latin, meaning a place of reception for guests, with the words, hotel and hostel, coming from the same origin. Given this origin, the lack of hospitality in the hospital described in this study is disturbing.</p><p>The hospital practice of ED boarding is not just about a lack of creature comforts. Nearly 20 years of literature have found the practice to be directly harmful to the ill and injured—linked to increased delirium, longer hospitalizations, and higher mortality [<span>3-5</span>]. The deleterious effects are magnified in vulnerable older adults [<span>6</span>]. The voices in this study tell us something the quantitative study data cannot: how older patients internalize these conditions, what they observe, and what they fear. Geriatric ED boarders are starkly aware of being placed in locations that lack basic safety features—no call bells, no privacy, and sometimes not even food.</p><p>A notable study finding was that participants did not blame their doctors or nurses. They reserved their criticism for the physical environment and the hospital systems that tolerate it. This distinction is vital. The healthcare workforce is compassionate and dedicated. Yet compassion does not compensate for a broken system. Clinical care that follows established guidelines delivered in a chaotic corridor is still just hallway care.</p><p>Boarding is often framed as an ED issue. It is not. It is a hospital throughput problem, a staffing problem, and a resource allocation problem [<span>7</span>]. Hospitals that prioritize their elective surgeries over acutely ill ED patients exacerbate boarding [<span>8</span>]. Nursing shortages and inpatient bed closures widen the gap. EDs are the pressure valve for a system that no longer has slack.</p><p>The findings of this study underscore that improving the care experience for geriatric ED boarders requires both a combination of a structural overhaul in the incentives hospitals face as well as the rapid promotion of interventions to improve the patient experience and mitigate quality issues during the hospital admission process. Many highly effective interventions exist to reduce boarding that can be implemented throughout the hospital [<span>9</span>]. Yet many hospitals have not implemented them nor effectively addressed their boarding problem.</p><p>The study found that one specific, targeted solution can yield meaningful change: a dedicated ED boarder unit, which was present in the ED during the study period. There, a quieter, more structured environment with lights dimmed at night, access to call bells, and attentive staff restored patient dignity and agency, to some degree. This suggests that modest environmental improvements in the ED could have outsized impacts on patient experience and well-being. Study participants consistently viewed this approach as more humane and tolerable than lying in hallway spaces.</p><p>Another area highlighted in the study was the idea to prioritize older adult patients for available beds, specifically those who are more likely to be harmed by the ED boarding. Realigning hospital reimbursement for older adults could incorporate validated assessments of frailty, cognitive impairment, and clinical acuity. This aligns with geriatric medicine principles and was strongly endorsed by participants in the study. With the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Age-Friendly Hospital Measure now promoting frailty and cognitive screening as one element of care, hospitals may have more of a regulatory impetus to use these data not only for documentation, but also for actionable triage decisions.</p><p>Broader scale, policy interventions are needed to drive accountability and ultimately durable change in the rising boarding in America's hospitals. Public reporting of boarding times is one idea that may drive action. Metrics of boarding are now being piloted by the Leapfrog Group. Additionally, accreditation standards that prohibit prolonged hallway care, and payment models that incentivize efficient throughput (rather than elective volume) could shift hospital priorities. CMS could consider time-based reimbursement penalties for excessive ED boarding, especially for high-risk populations like older adults.</p><p>Finally, we cannot escape the ethical dimensions that emerged from this study. If we accept that older adults are more likely to be harmed by boarding and less able to advocate for themselves, then continuing the status quo becomes indefensible. The hallway becomes not just a holding zone but a mirror reflecting our system's values. Most hospitals' mission statements emphasize the value of respect, underscoring the importance of treating patients with dignity. The practice of ED boarding systemically erodes such values.</p><p>Study participants were stoic, even forgiving of this. But stoicism should not be confused with acceptance. As one participant put it: “That's the way it is… but it's not really a good experience.” We owe our patients more than the inevitability of indignity.</p><p>As health systems work to address boarding and improve efficiency, we must keep geriatric voices front and center. This study reminds us that people are more than patients—they are observers, critics, and philosophers of their own care. These findings present multiple new themes and factors that deserve hypothesis-generating quantitative analysis. Their insights are not soft data; they are moral guideposts in a system too often built for convenience and economics rather than compassion.</p><p>J.M.P. wrote the initial draft of the editorial. R.M.R. and E.R.M. provide copyedits. All authors approved the final manuscript.</p><p>The authors declare no conflicts of interest.</p><p>This publication is linked to a related article by Perelman et al. To view this article, visit https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.19518.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":17240,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of the American Geriatrics Society\",\"volume\":\"73 8\",\"pages\":\"2331-2332\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":4.5000,\"publicationDate\":\"2025-06-24\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://agsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/jgs.19602\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of the American Geriatrics Society\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"3\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://agsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jgs.19602\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"医学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of the American Geriatrics Society","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://agsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jgs.19602","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去的三十年里,医院急诊室(ED)登机的做法以及由此导致的拥挤一直被定期和持续地称为公共卫生危机。然而,尽管利益相关者反复讨论和参与,没有广泛的政策解决方案,也没有持久的,急诊科护理的结构性变化,以有意义的方式解决了急诊科登机危机及其对患者护理和结果的负面影响。最近的证据表明,自2019冠状病毒病大流行爆发以来,这一问题已大幅恶化。在这些反复呼吁采取行动中,一个缺失的因素是老年急诊科寄宿生的生活经历。这期《美国老年医学会杂志》在马萨诸塞州总医院发表的一项名为“走廊感觉像无家可归”的研究填补了这一空白。它对老年急诊科寄宿生的经验和看法提供了深刻的见解,这些寄宿生是住院的老年人,他们在急诊科经历了很长时间的延误,无法转到住院部。该研究对26名65岁及以上的患者进行了定性分析,这些患者在急诊科呆了至少4小时。参与者的平均年龄为77岁。作者通过自己的语言,向我们展示了一个世界的窗口,在这个世界里,担架变成了床,噪音取代了休息,赤裸裸的脆弱被展示出来。研究人员发现,患者不仅因为漫长的等待而感到痛苦。老年ED寄宿生感到无力、暴露和被遗忘。对一些人来说,在走廊上寄宿就像无家可归或被囚禁。一位参与者将这段经历描述为“流亡”。当考虑到“hospital”一词的起源时,这种观点的讽刺意味不应该被忽视,这个词来自法语和中世纪拉丁语,意思是接待客人的地方,而“hotel”和“hostel”这两个词也来自同一个起源。鉴于这一原因,本研究中描述的医院缺乏热情好客令人不安。急诊科寄宿的医院实践不仅仅是缺乏物质享受。近20年的文献发现,这种做法对病人和伤者直接有害——与谵妄增加、住院时间延长和死亡率升高有关[3-5]。这种有害影响在脆弱的老年人身上被放大。这项研究中的声音告诉我们一些定量研究数据不能告诉我们的东西:老年患者如何内化这些条件,他们观察到什么,他们害怕什么。老年急诊科寄宿生清楚地意识到,他们被安置在缺乏基本安全设施的地方——没有呼叫铃,没有隐私,有时甚至没有食物。一项值得注意的研究发现是,参与者并不责怪他们的医生或护士。他们保留了对物理环境和容忍它的医院系统的批评。这一区别至关重要。医疗保健工作人员富有同情心和奉献精神。然而,同情并不能弥补一个破碎的体系。在混乱的走廊中遵循既定指导方针提供的临床护理仍然只是走廊护理。登机通常被认为是ED问题。事实并非如此。这是一个医院吞吐量问题、人员配置问题和资源分配问题。将选择性手术优先于急症患者的医院加剧了登机bb0。护理短缺和住院床位关闭扩大了差距。EDs是一个不再有松弛的系统的压力阀。这项研究的结果强调,改善老年急诊科寄宿生的护理体验,既需要医院面临的激励机制进行结构性改革,也需要快速推广干预措施,以改善患者体验,减轻住院过程中的质量问题。有许多非常有效的干预措施可以减少寄宿现象,这些措施可以在整个医院实施。然而,许多医院并没有实施这些措施,也没有有效地解决他们的寄宿问题。研究发现,一个特定的、有针对性的解决方案可以产生有意义的改变:在研究期间,一个专门的ED寄宿生单元出现在ED中。在那里,一个更安静、更有条理的环境,晚上灯光昏暗,有呼叫铃,细心的工作人员在一定程度上恢复了病人的尊严和能动性。这表明,在急诊科适度的环境改善可能会对病人的体验和福祉产生巨大的影响。研究参与者一致认为,这种方法比躺在走廊空间更人性化,也更容易接受。研究中强调的另一个领域是优先考虑老年患者的床位,特别是那些更有可能受到急诊科寄宿伤害的患者。重新调整老年人的医院报销可以纳入虚弱、认知障碍和临床敏锐度的有效评估。这与老年医学原则一致,并得到了研究参与者的强烈支持。 随着医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)的老年友好医院措施现在将虚弱和认知筛查作为护理的一个要素,医院可能会有更多的监管动力来使用这些数据,不仅用于记录,而且用于可操作的分类决策。需要更大范围的政策干预来推动问责制,并最终持久地改变美国医院不断上升的登机率。公开报告登机时间是一个可能推动行动的想法。目前,Leapfrog集团正在试行登机指标。此外,禁止长时间走廊护理的认证标准和激励高效吞吐量(而不是选择性数量)的支付模式可能会改变医院的优先事项。CMS可以考虑对过度的急诊科住院进行基于时间的补偿处罚,特别是对老年人等高危人群。最后,我们不能逃避从这项研究中出现的伦理维度。如果我们接受老年人更有可能因登机而受到伤害,而且更没有能力为自己辩护,那么继续保持现状就变得站不住脚了。走廊不仅仅是一个等候区,而是一面反映我们制度价值观的镜子。大多数医院的使命宣言都强调尊重的价值,强调有尊严地对待病人的重要性。教育署的封杀做法系统性地侵蚀了这些价值观。研究参与者是坚忍的,甚至原谅了这一点。但坚忍不应与接受相混淆。正如一位参与者所说:“事情就是这样……但这并不是一种好的体验。”我们欠病人的不仅仅是不可避免的侮辱。在卫生系统努力解决登船问题和提高效率的同时,我们必须把老年人的声音放在首位和中心位置。这项研究提醒我们,人们不仅仅是病人——他们是自己护理的观察者、批评家和哲学家。这些发现提出了多个新的主题和因素,值得进行假设生成定量分析。他们的见解不是软数据;在一个往往是为了方便和经济而不是同情而建立的体系中,他们是道德上的路标。写了社论的初稿。R.M.R.和E.R.M.提供副本。所有作者都认可了最终稿。作者声明无利益冲突。该出版物链接到Perelman等人的相关文章。要查看本文,请访问https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.19518。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Boarding in Emergency Department Hallways Circa 2025: Why Older Adult Patients Deserve Better

Boarding in Emergency Department Hallways Circa 2025: Why Older Adult Patients Deserve Better

Boarding in Emergency Department Hallways Circa 2025: Why Older Adult Patients Deserve Better

Boarding in Emergency Department Hallways Circa 2025: Why Older Adult Patients Deserve Better

Over the past three decades, the hospital practice of emergency department (ED) boarding and the crowding that results from it have been regularly and consistently named as a public health crisis. Yet, despite repeated stakeholder discussions and engagement, no broad policy solutions nor durable, structural changes in ED care have addressed the ED boarding crisis and its negative effect on patient care and outcomes in a meaningful way. Recent evidence has shown that the problem has worsened substantially since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic [1].

A missing element in these repeated calls for action is the lived experience of geriatric ED boarders. A study in this issue of the Journal of the American Geriatric Society performed at the Massachusetts General Hospital titled “Hallways Feel Like Homelessness,” fills that gap [2]. It offers an insightful look into the experience and perceptions of geriatric ED boarders—ill older adults admitted to the hospital who experienced long delays in the ED to be transferred to their inpatient beds.

The study presents a qualitative analysis of 26 patients aged 65 and older who boarded in the ED for at least 4 h. The mean age of participants was 77 years. Through their own words, the authors present a window into a world where stretchers become beds, noise replaces rest, and naked vulnerability is on display. The authors found that patients were not just distressed by their long waits. Geriatric ED boarders felt powerless, exposed, and forgotten. For some, boarding in a hallway was likened to being homeless or imprisoned. One participant described the experience as being “in exile.” The irony of this sentiment should not be lost when considering the origin of the word hospital, from French and medieval Latin, meaning a place of reception for guests, with the words, hotel and hostel, coming from the same origin. Given this origin, the lack of hospitality in the hospital described in this study is disturbing.

The hospital practice of ED boarding is not just about a lack of creature comforts. Nearly 20 years of literature have found the practice to be directly harmful to the ill and injured—linked to increased delirium, longer hospitalizations, and higher mortality [3-5]. The deleterious effects are magnified in vulnerable older adults [6]. The voices in this study tell us something the quantitative study data cannot: how older patients internalize these conditions, what they observe, and what they fear. Geriatric ED boarders are starkly aware of being placed in locations that lack basic safety features—no call bells, no privacy, and sometimes not even food.

A notable study finding was that participants did not blame their doctors or nurses. They reserved their criticism for the physical environment and the hospital systems that tolerate it. This distinction is vital. The healthcare workforce is compassionate and dedicated. Yet compassion does not compensate for a broken system. Clinical care that follows established guidelines delivered in a chaotic corridor is still just hallway care.

Boarding is often framed as an ED issue. It is not. It is a hospital throughput problem, a staffing problem, and a resource allocation problem [7]. Hospitals that prioritize their elective surgeries over acutely ill ED patients exacerbate boarding [8]. Nursing shortages and inpatient bed closures widen the gap. EDs are the pressure valve for a system that no longer has slack.

The findings of this study underscore that improving the care experience for geriatric ED boarders requires both a combination of a structural overhaul in the incentives hospitals face as well as the rapid promotion of interventions to improve the patient experience and mitigate quality issues during the hospital admission process. Many highly effective interventions exist to reduce boarding that can be implemented throughout the hospital [9]. Yet many hospitals have not implemented them nor effectively addressed their boarding problem.

The study found that one specific, targeted solution can yield meaningful change: a dedicated ED boarder unit, which was present in the ED during the study period. There, a quieter, more structured environment with lights dimmed at night, access to call bells, and attentive staff restored patient dignity and agency, to some degree. This suggests that modest environmental improvements in the ED could have outsized impacts on patient experience and well-being. Study participants consistently viewed this approach as more humane and tolerable than lying in hallway spaces.

Another area highlighted in the study was the idea to prioritize older adult patients for available beds, specifically those who are more likely to be harmed by the ED boarding. Realigning hospital reimbursement for older adults could incorporate validated assessments of frailty, cognitive impairment, and clinical acuity. This aligns with geriatric medicine principles and was strongly endorsed by participants in the study. With the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Age-Friendly Hospital Measure now promoting frailty and cognitive screening as one element of care, hospitals may have more of a regulatory impetus to use these data not only for documentation, but also for actionable triage decisions.

Broader scale, policy interventions are needed to drive accountability and ultimately durable change in the rising boarding in America's hospitals. Public reporting of boarding times is one idea that may drive action. Metrics of boarding are now being piloted by the Leapfrog Group. Additionally, accreditation standards that prohibit prolonged hallway care, and payment models that incentivize efficient throughput (rather than elective volume) could shift hospital priorities. CMS could consider time-based reimbursement penalties for excessive ED boarding, especially for high-risk populations like older adults.

Finally, we cannot escape the ethical dimensions that emerged from this study. If we accept that older adults are more likely to be harmed by boarding and less able to advocate for themselves, then continuing the status quo becomes indefensible. The hallway becomes not just a holding zone but a mirror reflecting our system's values. Most hospitals' mission statements emphasize the value of respect, underscoring the importance of treating patients with dignity. The practice of ED boarding systemically erodes such values.

Study participants were stoic, even forgiving of this. But stoicism should not be confused with acceptance. As one participant put it: “That's the way it is… but it's not really a good experience.” We owe our patients more than the inevitability of indignity.

As health systems work to address boarding and improve efficiency, we must keep geriatric voices front and center. This study reminds us that people are more than patients—they are observers, critics, and philosophers of their own care. These findings present multiple new themes and factors that deserve hypothesis-generating quantitative analysis. Their insights are not soft data; they are moral guideposts in a system too often built for convenience and economics rather than compassion.

J.M.P. wrote the initial draft of the editorial. R.M.R. and E.R.M. provide copyedits. All authors approved the final manuscript.

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

This publication is linked to a related article by Perelman et al. To view this article, visit https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.19518.

求助全文
通过发布文献求助,成功后即可免费获取论文全文。 去求助
来源期刊
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
6.30%
发文量
504
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS) is the go-to journal for clinical aging research. We provide a diverse, interprofessional community of healthcare professionals with the latest insights on geriatrics education, clinical practice, and public policy—all supporting the high-quality, person-centered care essential to our well-being as we age. Since the publication of our first edition in 1953, JAGS has remained one of the oldest and most impactful journals dedicated exclusively to gerontology and geriatrics.
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:604180095
Book学术官方微信