Monday, May 28, 2012

AGS 2012 - Sat: Recommendations for Vitamin D to Reduce Falls and Injuries

AGS Expert Panel Recommendations for Vitamin D to Reduce Falls and Injuries in Older Adults

Moderator: James E. Judge, MD, Evercare
This session will review the recommendations of the AGS Expert Panel on Vitamin D supplementation to prevent falls and injuries.
Goals of AGS Expert Panel Convened by CDC
James E. Judge, MD, Evercare

Evidence that Geriatricians Should have a Goal of Achieving a Serum Level of 30 ng/ml (25)OH Vitamin D to Reduce Falls and Injuries in Older Adults
Douglas P. Kiel, MD, MPH, Harvard Medical School

Strategies to Achieve Vitamin D Levels that Will Reduce Falls and Fractures in Many Ways
F. Michael Gloth, III, MD, Johns Hopkins University

AGS 2012 - Sat: Feeding Tube Use in Dementia

Feeding Tube Use in Persons with Advanced Dementia: Where Are We Now?

Developed by the Ethics, Ethnogeriatrics, and Clinical Practice & Models of Care Committees
Moderator:  Ramona L. Rhodes, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor of Medicine, UT Southwestern Medical Center
This educational program aims to discuss the role of the health care provider in the medical decision-making process, alternatives means of nutritional support and feeding techniques in persons with advanced dementia, and current research that is being conducted in this area.
Feeding Tube Insertion among Persons with Advanced Cognitive Impairment: An Overview
Ramona L. Rhodes, MD, MPH
Oral Feeding Options in Dementia Care and Decision-Making Tools: A Review of the Literature and Current Research
Laura C. Hanson, MD, MPH, Professor, University of North Carolina and Chapel Hill School of Medicine
Feeding Tube Placement in Advanced Dementia: The Speech-Language Pathologist’s Perspective
Helen M. Sharp, PhD, CCC-SLP, Associate Professor, Western Michigan University
Development of Community Guidelines on Long Term Feeding Tube Placement
Patricia Bomba, MD, Excellus Blue Cross Blue Shield

AGS 2012 - Sat: Hospital Elder Life Program (HELP)

H.E.L.P. to Prevent Hospital Complications

Developed by the Hospital Elder Life Program Special Interest Group. 
Moderator: Sharon K. Inouye, MD, MPH, Professor of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School
This symposium will review the HELP model, present clinical results including challenges as well as review the financial/cost implications and benefits of implementing HELP in the hospital. Resources to facilitate individuals starting their own program will be reviewed.
(HELP Evaluation and Dissemination: Annotated References)
What is HELP?
Heidi R. Wierman, MD, Division Director, Geriatrics, Maine Medical Center

HELP as a Model for Quality Improvement in Patient Safety for Elderly Inpatients
Fred H. Rubin, MD, AGSF, Professor of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
HELP...How to Get Started and Where to go from There
Anne Pizzacalla, BScN, MHSc, Clinical Nurse Specialist, Hospital Elder Life Program Hamilton Health Sciences

AGS 2012 - Sat: Pharmacotherapy Update

Pharmacotherapy Update: 2012

Developed by the Pharmacists Section.
Moderator: Sunny A. Linnebur, PharmD, BCPS, CGP, Associate Professor, University of Colorado School of Pharmacy
Each year, several new medications are approved by the FDA and hundreds of clinical trials are published on existing medications. This new information has an impact on decisions made by health care professionals caring for older adults. The purpose of this symposium is to summarize the changes over the past year in pharmacotherapy. The speakers will examine new information on current medications commonly prescribed to older adults and newly approved medications that may be prescribed for older adults.
New Medications: Recent Releases and Coming Attractions
Joseph P. Vande Griend, PharmD, Assistant Professor, University of Colorado, Skaggs School of Pharmacy 
Clinical Perspectives on FDA Updates and Black-Box Warnings
Zachary A. Marcum, PharmD, MS, Assistant Professor, University of Pittsburgh

AGS 2012 - Sat: Cancer in LTC

Cancer in Long Term Care

Developed by the Cancer and Aging Special Interest Group & Long Term Care Special Interest Group.
Moderator: Beatriz Korc-Grodzicki, MD, PhD, Chief of Geriatric Service, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
The purpose of this workshop is to describe the types of cancer patients in long term care and to provide a framework for clinical decision making. This workshop will discuss some of the challenges in caring for older cancer patients that are residents of nursing homes (NH) including 1) understanding the benefits and risks of providing standard therapy to a vulnerable population 2) presenting best estimates of the current burden of cancer in the long-term-care population, 3) providing a review of the current screening guidelines as they apply to elderly long-term-care patients, and 4) offering experienced-based suggestions for clinicians to help them respond to patient and family concerns about the limitations of cancer care.
Long-Term Care and Its Resident. Estimating Life Expectancy
Miriam B. Rodin, MD, PhD, CMD, Associate Professor Geriatrics, St. Louis University Medical School
Should this Patient be Screened for Cancer?
James A. Wallace, MD, Co-Director Specialized Oncologic Care and Research of the Elderly (SOCARE), University of Chicago – Oncology/Geriatrics
How to Discuss Cancer in the Nursing Home with Patients and Families
Rachelle Bernacki, MD, MS, Director of Quality Initiatives, Pain and Palliative Care Program, Dana Farber Cancer Institute

AGS 2012 - Sat: Geriatric Education

Geriatric Education

Developed by the Research Committee
Moderator: Reena Karani, MD, Mount Sinai School of Medicine
This session presents the latest peer-reviewed research focused on geriatric education with questions and answers to follow.
P34 - Impact of a Multi-modal Education Intervention on Urinary Catheter Utilization in Older Adult Inpatients
Richard E. Norman, BSc, MASc, University of Toronto

P35 - A Geriatrics Rotation as a Medicine Elective: A Smart Option for Medical Students?
Annie L. Nguyen, MPH, Medical College of Wisconsin

P36 - Case Presentation as a Direct Observation Method to Evaluate Internal Medicine Residents' Systems-Based Practice Competency
Karin M. Ouchida, MD, Weill Cornell Medical Center

P37 - Replicating a Chief Resident Immersion Training in Geriatrics (CRIT)
Sharon A. Levine, MD, Boston University School of Medicine

P38 - Development and Validation of a Geriatrics Knowledge Test to Evaluate Geriatrics Fellowship Programs
Alia T. Tuqan, MD, University of California, Los Angeles

P39 - The UCSF Interprofessional Aging and Palliative Care Elective
Josette A.Rivera, MD, University of California, San Francisco

AGS 2012 - Sat: Effective Care Transitions

Effective Care Transitions: the Call for Geriatric Leadership

Moderator: Sally L. Brooks, MD
This session will create the “business case" for Geriatric Medicine and Inter-disciplinary Teams by targeting resources in improving Care Transitions and decreasing avoidable re-hospitalizations. The call for action is now as Hospital and Healthcare Systems respond to the Affordable Care Act and Payers and Physician leaders prepare for an ACO future. Our Society membership created the foundation for these principles of right care, right time, and right place.
Successful Hospital-to-Home Care Management Programs for CHF Patients
Michael W. Rich, MD, AGSF, Washington University School of Medicine
  • Summary and Conclusions
    • Older adults account for the majority of hospitalizations for heart failure, MI, and pneumonia
    • Despite multiple studies documenting the efficacy of multidisciplinary interventions for reducing readmissions, such interventions remain largely under-utilized and readmission rates remain unacceptably high
    • Successful interventions must be patient-centered rather than disease-centered, and must include direct in-person interactions with patients and caregivers
    • Given the demographics of these conditions (as well as many others) and the expertise of geriatricians in providing patient-centered multidisciplinary care, geriatricians are ideally positioned to take a leadership role in the design and implementation of effective care-transition strategies

The Urgency for Geriatric Care Leadership Given the Current Healthcare Trends and Environment
Sally L. Brooks, MD, AGSF, Kindred Healthcare

Building a Practice Model with Effective Care Transition Results
Jerome Wilborn, MD, IPC
  • Understand ways that geriatrics healthcare professionals can offer added value to hospitals and health systems in our current payment environment, through improving transitional care
  • Review a “systems” based approach to care coordination
  • Discuss the business case for effective care transitions from community perspective

A Business Case for a Replicable Care Transitions Model
Kyle R. Allen, DO, AGSF, Riverside Health System

Slides
#8 Re-hospitalization Rates for Short-stay Nursing Facility Patients, by State
#9 Hospitalizations: Contributing Factors
#11 SNF Vs Hospital E/M Code Payments - 2010
#17 Early Readmission of Elderly Patients with Congestive Heart Failure
#32 Mor, et. al, using merged claims data, found that 23.5% of Medicare beneficiaries discharged from the hospital to a skilled nursing facility (SNF) were directly readmitted within 30 days at a cost to Medicare of $4.34 billion in 2006.