» Articles » PMID: 35103191

Emergency Clinicians' Perceptions of Communication Tools to Establish the Mental Baseline of Older Adults: A Qualitative Study

Overview
Journal Cureus
Date 2022 Feb 1
PMID 35103191
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background Evaluating older adults with altered mental status in emergency settings can be challenging due to the inability to obtain a history from patients directly and limited collateral information about the change from a patient's mental status baseline. Documents and videos establishing a patient's mental baseline could represent useful communication tools to aid emergency clinicians. Methods Qualitative interviews conducted with 22 emergency clinicians (12 physicians and 10 advanced practice providers) identified methods they use to determine baseline mental status of older adults in the ED and the perceived utility of document- and video-based information about an older adult's baseline mental status. Interview transcripts were coded for dominant themes using deductive and inductive approaches. Results Participants determine an older adult's baseline mental status by obtaining information about the patient's baseline cognition (memory and communication) and function (activities of daily living and mobility). The techniques they use include 1) reviewing the electronic medical record, 2) speaking with family members or caregivers by phone or in person, and 3) obtaining verbal or phone reports from emergency medical services personnel or health care providers from short- or long-term care facilities. The majority of participants thought that a document or video with information about a patient's baseline mental status would be useful (n=15, 68%), qualifying that content ought to be brief, clearly dated, and periodically updated. Conclusions Documents or videos could assist emergency clinicians in establishing baseline cognitive function when evaluating geriatric patients and may have implications for improving the detection of delirium.

Citing Articles

Shared Decision-Making on Life-Sustaining Treatment: A Survey of Current Barriers in Practice Among Clinicians Across China.

Liang Y, Zhang H, Li S, Ma Q Healthcare (Basel). 2025; 13(5).

PMID: 40077109 PMC: 11898668. DOI: 10.3390/healthcare13050547.

References
1.
Elie M, Rousseau F, Cole M, Primeau F, McCusker J, Bellavance F . Prevalence and detection of delirium in elderly emergency department patients. CMAJ. 2000; 163(8):977-81. PMC: 80546. View

2.
Kiger M, Varpio L . Thematic analysis of qualitative data: AMEE Guide No. 131. Med Teach. 2020; 42(8):846-854. DOI: 10.1080/0142159X.2020.1755030. View

3.
Kakuma R, Galbaud du Fort G, Arsenault L, Perrault A, Platt R, Monette J . Delirium in older emergency department patients discharged home: effect on survival. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2003; 51(4):443-50. DOI: 10.1046/j.1532-5415.2003.51151.x. View

4.
Guest G, Namey E, Chen M . A simple method to assess and report thematic saturation in qualitative research. PLoS One. 2020; 15(5):e0232076. PMC: 7200005. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0232076. View

5.
Wu D, Deoghare S, Shan Z, Meganathan K, Blondon K . The potential role of dashboard use and navigation in reducing medical errors of an electronic health record system: a mixed-method simulation handoff study. Health Syst (Basingstoke). 2019; 8(3):203-214. PMC: 6896471. DOI: 10.1080/20476965.2019.1620637. View