2020
DOI: 10.1186/s12877-020-1443-1
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Clinical and functional patient characteristics predict medical needs in older patients at risk of functional decline

Anne-Carina Scharf,
Janine Gronewold,
Christian Dahlmann
et al.

Abstract: Background: The rising number of older multimorbid in-patients has implications for medical care. There is a growing need for the identification of factors predicting the needs of older patients in hospital environments. Our aim was to evaluate the use of clinical and functional patient characteristics for the prediction of medical needs in older hospitalized patients. Methods: Two hundred forty-two in-patients (57.4% male) aged 78.4 ± 6.4 years, who were consecutively admitted to internal medicine departments… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…As illustrated in Fig. 2 A and B, frailty [ 18 , 19 ], cognitive impairment [ 40 ], functional decline [ 41 ] and poor oral intake during admission would have been descendants of depressive symptoms and malnutrition, and thereby considered mediators in the causal paths between depressive symptoms or malnutrition and 30-day readmission. In conventional analyses that adjusted for these mediators, we failed to observe associations between depressive symptoms and malnutrition on readmission, plausibly due to bias introduced by overadjustment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As illustrated in Fig. 2 A and B, frailty [ 18 , 19 ], cognitive impairment [ 40 ], functional decline [ 41 ] and poor oral intake during admission would have been descendants of depressive symptoms and malnutrition, and thereby considered mediators in the causal paths between depressive symptoms or malnutrition and 30-day readmission. In conventional analyses that adjusted for these mediators, we failed to observe associations between depressive symptoms and malnutrition on readmission, plausibly due to bias introduced by overadjustment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the importance of intensive nursing care for preventing falls and risky behaviors in elderly patients continues to grow, nursing management fees have been expanded and revised from “applying and managing physical restraint” to “risk behavior management” [ 31 ]. The presence of comorbidities, decreased ADL, cognitive impairment, and depression in elderly inpatients is an important predictor of increased nursing care [ 32 ]. Elderly risk screening and assessment tools suggest that high-risk older adults have longer hospital stays, require more nursing care, and have an increased risk of falls [ 33 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite this, survival has remained relatively stable over the past decades [2], especially in elderly patients, who make up an important subgroup of ATC patients, among which prognosis is very poor [3,4,12,[15][16][17][18]. This group of people often represents a combination of several comorbidities, immunodeficiencies and organ dysfunctions and may not tolerate aggressive treatment [19,20]. In contrast, elderly patients with a poor prognosis should spend as little of their remaining lifetime attending oncologic treatments and are, therefore, better candidates for short treatments including hypofractionated radiotherapy [21].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%