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Cognitive Impairment in Older Emergency Department Users and Associated Adverse Outcomes

J

Jewish General Hospital

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Physical Frailty
Older Emergency Department Users
Cognitive Frailty

Treatments

Other: Observational

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04235738
2020-2184

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study examines the prevalence and incidence of older ER users with cognitive impairment (i.e., dementia and/or delirium) using the ER2 item temporal disorientation in older ED users who are participants of the ER2 cohort study database.

Full description

The Emergency Departments (EDs) in North America are under duress because of overcrowding, delays and diversions, which increase to epidemic proportions. The aging of Canadian's population amplifies the magnitude of this situation because older ED users are the fastest increasing group of ED users and they have complex and specific needs.

There are simple interventions with which providers must proceed in order to cure or prevent short-term ED adverse events. Delirium, motor deconditioning, polypharmacy-related adverse drug reactions, and inappropriate home support are the main conditions to target when taking care of older ED users. We previously demonstrated that acting on these conditions may significantly accelerate the discharge and significantly reduce the length of ED and hospital stay. Evidence-based medicine showed that simple and early interventions may prevent delirium (e.g., through hydration, avoiding restraint, mobilizing and satisfying basic needs, time and place reorientation) and motor deconditioning (e.g., through encouraging mobility, up to chair at mealtime during daytime hours, providing appropriate walking aid) in older patients. Medication reconciliation is also an efficient intervention to prevent adverse drug reactions. Furthermore, an early assessment of home support is a crucial step in adjusting services for an early and smooth discharge back home. Based on this evidence, we have modified the 6-item Emergency Room Evaluation and Recommendations (ER2) by adding an interventional component to the assessment portion of the tool. The interventional part depends on the assessment's results and is based on recommendations designed to encourage easy and basic interventions that prevent delirium, motor deconditioning, adverse drug interactions and inappropriate home support. These recommendations are based on answers to the ER2 items

Enrollment

4,724 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

75+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • An unplanned ED visit and to be on a stretcher

Exclusion criteria

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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