Geriatric nursing assessment and intervention in an emergency department: a pilot study

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Geriatric nursing assessment and intervention in an emergency department : a pilot study. / Rosted, Elizabeth Emilie; Wagner, Lis; Hendriksen, Carsten; Poulsen, Ingrid.

I: International Journal of Older People Nursing, Bind 7, Nr. 2, 06.2012, s. 141-151.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Rosted, EE, Wagner, L, Hendriksen, C & Poulsen, I 2012, 'Geriatric nursing assessment and intervention in an emergency department: a pilot study', International Journal of Older People Nursing, bind 7, nr. 2, s. 141-151. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-3743.2012.00323.x

APA

Rosted, E. E., Wagner, L., Hendriksen, C., & Poulsen, I. (2012). Geriatric nursing assessment and intervention in an emergency department: a pilot study. International Journal of Older People Nursing, 7(2), 141-151. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-3743.2012.00323.x

Vancouver

Rosted EE, Wagner L, Hendriksen C, Poulsen I. Geriatric nursing assessment and intervention in an emergency department: a pilot study. International Journal of Older People Nursing. 2012 jun.;7(2):141-151. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-3743.2012.00323.x

Author

Rosted, Elizabeth Emilie ; Wagner, Lis ; Hendriksen, Carsten ; Poulsen, Ingrid. / Geriatric nursing assessment and intervention in an emergency department : a pilot study. I: International Journal of Older People Nursing. 2012 ; Bind 7, Nr. 2. s. 141-151.

Bibtex

@article{6b09ab9004ad4284a79a135e8326792b,
title = "Geriatric nursing assessment and intervention in an emergency department: a pilot study",
abstract = "To describe and test a model for structured nursing assessment and intervention to older people discharged from emergency department (ED). Background. Older people recently discharged from hospital are at high risk of readmission. This risk may increase when they are discharged straight home from an ED as time pressure requires staff to focus on the presenting problem although many have complex, unresolved, care needs. Method. A prospective descriptive pilot study was conducted. Older people aged 70 and over and at risk of adverse health and functional outcome were included. Intervention: At discharge, and at 1 and 6 months follow-up, a brief standardised nursing assessment (ISAR 2) developed by McCusker et al. was carried out. The focus was on unresolved problems that required medical or nursing intervention, new or different home care services or comprehensive geriatric assessment. After assessment, the nurse made relevant referrals to the geriatric outpatient clinic, community health centre, general practitioner or made arrangements with next of kin. Results. One hundred and fifty people participated, mean age was 81.7. At discharge, they had a mean of 1.9 unresolved problems, after 1 month 0.8, and after 6 months 0.4. Older people receiving home care services increased from 79% at discharge to 89% at 1 month and 90% at 6 months follow-up. Conclusion. ISAR 2 works well in a Danish ED setting and intercepts older peoples' problems. It seems that unresolved problems decrease when a nurse assesses and intervenes at discharge from ED, and at follow-up. However, a randomised controlled test should be carried out to confirm this. Implications for practice. Nursing assessment and intervention should be implemented in the ED to reduce older peoples' unrevealed problems.",
author = "Rosted, {Elizabeth Emilie} and Lis Wagner and Carsten Hendriksen and Ingrid Poulsen",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.",
year = "2012",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1111/j.1748-3743.2012.00323.x",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "141--151",
journal = "International journal of older people nursing",
issn = "1748-3735",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Geriatric nursing assessment and intervention in an emergency department

T2 - a pilot study

AU - Rosted, Elizabeth Emilie

AU - Wagner, Lis

AU - Hendriksen, Carsten

AU - Poulsen, Ingrid

N1 - © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

PY - 2012/6

Y1 - 2012/6

N2 - To describe and test a model for structured nursing assessment and intervention to older people discharged from emergency department (ED). Background. Older people recently discharged from hospital are at high risk of readmission. This risk may increase when they are discharged straight home from an ED as time pressure requires staff to focus on the presenting problem although many have complex, unresolved, care needs. Method. A prospective descriptive pilot study was conducted. Older people aged 70 and over and at risk of adverse health and functional outcome were included. Intervention: At discharge, and at 1 and 6 months follow-up, a brief standardised nursing assessment (ISAR 2) developed by McCusker et al. was carried out. The focus was on unresolved problems that required medical or nursing intervention, new or different home care services or comprehensive geriatric assessment. After assessment, the nurse made relevant referrals to the geriatric outpatient clinic, community health centre, general practitioner or made arrangements with next of kin. Results. One hundred and fifty people participated, mean age was 81.7. At discharge, they had a mean of 1.9 unresolved problems, after 1 month 0.8, and after 6 months 0.4. Older people receiving home care services increased from 79% at discharge to 89% at 1 month and 90% at 6 months follow-up. Conclusion. ISAR 2 works well in a Danish ED setting and intercepts older peoples' problems. It seems that unresolved problems decrease when a nurse assesses and intervenes at discharge from ED, and at follow-up. However, a randomised controlled test should be carried out to confirm this. Implications for practice. Nursing assessment and intervention should be implemented in the ED to reduce older peoples' unrevealed problems.

AB - To describe and test a model for structured nursing assessment and intervention to older people discharged from emergency department (ED). Background. Older people recently discharged from hospital are at high risk of readmission. This risk may increase when they are discharged straight home from an ED as time pressure requires staff to focus on the presenting problem although many have complex, unresolved, care needs. Method. A prospective descriptive pilot study was conducted. Older people aged 70 and over and at risk of adverse health and functional outcome were included. Intervention: At discharge, and at 1 and 6 months follow-up, a brief standardised nursing assessment (ISAR 2) developed by McCusker et al. was carried out. The focus was on unresolved problems that required medical or nursing intervention, new or different home care services or comprehensive geriatric assessment. After assessment, the nurse made relevant referrals to the geriatric outpatient clinic, community health centre, general practitioner or made arrangements with next of kin. Results. One hundred and fifty people participated, mean age was 81.7. At discharge, they had a mean of 1.9 unresolved problems, after 1 month 0.8, and after 6 months 0.4. Older people receiving home care services increased from 79% at discharge to 89% at 1 month and 90% at 6 months follow-up. Conclusion. ISAR 2 works well in a Danish ED setting and intercepts older peoples' problems. It seems that unresolved problems decrease when a nurse assesses and intervenes at discharge from ED, and at follow-up. However, a randomised controlled test should be carried out to confirm this. Implications for practice. Nursing assessment and intervention should be implemented in the ED to reduce older peoples' unrevealed problems.

U2 - 10.1111/j.1748-3743.2012.00323.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1748-3743.2012.00323.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

SP - 141

EP - 151

JO - International journal of older people nursing

JF - International journal of older people nursing

SN - 1748-3735

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 40225565