Category Archives: Elderly

What do we do when we run out of options?

Perhaps no other people on earth are more optimistic than Americans.

We walk the streets of this world as if we own them, and if we do not own them today, we will own them tomorrow.

Two of our most beloved Presidents of the 20th Century were elected and reelected not so much for their programs but for their optimism and soaring rhetoric: FDR and Ronald Reagan.

When faced with a problem, we have a Plan B, and if Plan B doesn’t work, well, their are 24 more letters and lots of numbers to follow.

However, sometimes optimism runs into brick wall reality.

My step father is 96 years old. He is in a hospital bed this evening, for the third time in a month.

When he was younger, he was a swimmer and later a swimming coach. In his 60s and 70s he played golf regularly and still turned heads at the community swimming pool. In his 80s he could no longer play golf so he turned to crossword puzzles, books, and television.

A few days ago he fell at home. Sometimes older people fall and break something, and sometimes something breaks so they fall.

He has a compressed fracture of the spine. He could have gone to rehab, but Medicare requires 2.5 hours of daily exercise to qualify. He has aged beyond that. So, he went home with some non-narcotic painkiller.

The next day he returned to the hospital in excruciating pain.

Here are the choices I see for him:

1. Endure excruciating pain

2. Take painkillers that will render him drugged unconscious or nearly unconscious.

Since he is metabolically in pretty good shape despite a pacemaker, he can choose 1 or 2 for up to five years.

So, what do we do, optimists that we are, when there are no more good options?

How Do We Implement What Works?

Medicare is abandoning the one experimental program that works. So claims Ezra Klein of the Washington Post in “If this was a pill, you’d do anything to get it.”

Klein describes a program by Healthy Quality Partners (HQP) where nurses make home visits to geriatric patients with chronic illnesses. It has been subsidized by Medicare as an experiment, in which some randomly chosen patients receive the intervention while some do not. The results have been better outcomes at lower cost to Medicare per the article as well as a study published last July.

Let’s assume that the claims are true: better outcomes and lower costs. How do we take an experiment, and by definition experiments have a beginning and an end, and generalize it into practice?

There are numerous possibilities:

First, we could do what the article implies: provide more government funds to Healthy Quality Partners, instructing them to expand the experiment operationally beyond the 1,736 members in Pennsylvania. I am assuming that maintaining indefinitely a small-scale experiment that works makes no sense–onward and upward.

Second, we could change the reimbursement scheme at Medicare to provide reimbursement for such services so that anyone in the country could create a similar program with the financial incentive of knowing that Medicare would reimburse the services.

Here is how that second possibility has developed:

The Clinical Procedure Terminology (CPT) codes were created and are owned by the American Medical Association. Recently Medicare adopted additional CPTs for coding reimbursement for coordination of care services.

Care Coordination CPTs

A statement by the American Nurses Association (ANA) is enthusiastic about the addition of the codes. Note: the ANA participates on the AMA CPT and RVU Update Committee.

ANA Care Coordination

Eileen Shannon Carlson RN, JD of the ANA points out that it is rare for CPTs to be adopted that only apply to nurses, as do two of chronic care coordination additions.

To be fair, the new codes only reimburse care coordination after a hospitalization and for a short period of time, why the HQP initiative addressed the needs of the elderly with chronic conditions. Nonetheless, I can imagine the next step being a protocol to target care coordination for the elderly independent of a hospitalization. Contrary to much in the popular press, government programs are very aware of spending dollars and getting value in return, so they limit risk by taking baby steps in developing programs.

Ezra Klein may well be correct, or he might be underestimating the challenge of turning a large ship, particularly when the upfront costs of such a turn may be prohibitive. What do you think?

Bad News for Boomers: Our Parents Were Healthier

As Americans we believe in progress, in a better tomorrow, sometimes with a bump in the road or a hiccough, but always a better tomorrow.

The data are in (March 4,2013 edition of JAMA Internal Medicine), and it ain’t happening for boomers. Blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, and obesity–all greater than the previous generation.

Boomer_Parent_Comparison_JAMAinternalmed_20130304
Source: The Status of Baby Boomers’ Health in the United States The Healthiest Generation?
Dana E. King, MD, MS; Eric Matheson, MD, MS; Svetlana Chirina, MPH; Anoop Shankar, MD, PhD, MPH; Jordan Broman-Fulks
JAMA Intern Med. 2013;173(5):385-386

Although longevity has risen during the twenty-year gap between the two groups, every other indicator of health, except smoking, has become less favorable. And the pattern is clear.

At the top of the following chart are general measures of health. Then, we can see that lifestyle factors have declined leading to the trends in the last section: declining indicators of cardiovascular health.

We can’t choose to be healthy or not: what we can do is make healthy choices by changing the lifestyle factors.

We are choosing illness at great expense to ourselves, both financially and in quality of life, while continuing to endure longer and sicker lives instead of enjoying healthier lives.

Boomer_Parent_Extract_Comparison

Calcium: Friend or foe? Part I

As I approached a certain age, my doctor said, “Oh, are you taking calcium supplements?” And, I asked him, “Isn’t arterial plaque calcified cholesterol? Is it really a good idea to flood my arteries with calcium?” He is a thoughtful person. “Maybe not,” he said, upon reflection.

The main therapeutic use of calcium supplements is to ward off osteoporosis. We are beginning to live longer than our bones were intended, and we are trying to avoid turning into boneless amoebae before we die. Knowing from childhood that “calcium builds strong bones,” we thought calcium supplements made perfect sense.

Calcium Source: news@Jama

I felt really validated when studies came out showing calcium to be a cardiac risk. The most recent was published online a month ago. The NIH AARP Diet and Health Study found a higher risk of cardiovascular events in men taking supplementary calcium. Why the risk did not appear to be elevated for women is a subject for further study.

Similar findings have been reported in the British Medical Journal: Heart and Education in Heart.
Calcium supplements: bad for the heart?
Heart 2012;98:12 895-896

As well as in other European studies:
2011_BMJ_Heart_Calcium

Fat old people have a problem. Fat old people are a problem.

Bette Davis famously said, “Old age is no place for sissies.” Growing old is challenge enough, so is being obese—but put them together and . . . .

Among the challenges:

1. Accelerated cognitive decline. A recent study found that cognitive decline was accelerated among the obese with any two of the four abnormalities:
a. High triglycerides or use of lipid-lowering medications
b. High low-density lipoproteins (LDL)
c. Elevated blood pressure or use of blood pressure medications
d. Elevated blood glucose

A 2009 Nursing World article added the following life-threatening illnesses:

2. Cardiovascular Disease. Over 80 percent of older Americans dies from this disease. Obesity seems to exacerbate the inflammatory process that underlies it.

3. Gallbladder Disease. Obesity is believed to effect a decrease in bile salts and increase in cholesterol.

4. Cancer. The evidence that obesity is a risk factor for cancer, particularly breast cancer, is growing.

5. Diabetes. Even relatively small weight gains can provoke a genetic tendency toward diabetes, so much the worse for the large weight gains that result in obesity.

As well as the nonfatal ailments:

6. Respiratory Problems. Lungs decrease in size, and the chest wall becomes heavier.

7. Arthritis and Osteo-arthritis. While arthritis is a general challenge for older adults, obesity puts weight on the knee and hip joints, resulting in damage to cartilage.

8. Skin conditions. Perspiration and friction can lead to persistent skin conditions.

The necessary emotional and financial burden of caring for the aged in our society, as well we should, is inflated by the unnecessary burdens of avoidable disease and disability. As we address the health needs of our population, we must lessen the burden of the aged on our society, not by decreasing available benefits but by decreasing needs. That goal requires improving health before and during old age.

Further reading:
Obesity Among Older Americans
National Blueprint: Increasing Physical Activity Among Adults Age 50 and Over
Effect of Obesity on Falls, Injury, and Disability