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New National Perioperative Guideline for the Delivery of Quality Care for Geriatric Surgical Patients Released
Joint best practice recommendations from American College of Surgeons and American Geriatrics Society address unique care required for older adults facing surgery.
Chicago (Jan. 4, 2016)—Responding to the needs of the country’s growing older adult population, a new collaborative best practices guideline was released today for optimal care of older adults immediately before, during, and after surgical operations (a timeframe known as the “perioperative” period). The new consensus-based guideline was developed by the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP®) and the American Geriatrics Society’s (AGS) Geriatrics-for- Specialists Initiative (GSI), with support from The John A. Hartford Foundation. With more than 40 million older adults living in the U.S. today—and with that number expected to nearly double to 89 million by 2050—providing expert guidance on surgical care is key since the need for surgical services increases with age and targeted guidance during the perioperative period can speed recovery.
AGS Launches Coordinating Center for Geriatric Workforce Enhancement Program to Support Improved Health Care for Older Adults
Under a $3 million grant from The John A. Hartford Foundation, the American Geriatrics Society will administer a Geriatrics Workforce Enhancement Program Coordinating Center to provide strategic resources for 44 HRSA awardees working on local solutions to the national geriatrics workforce shortage
- W/ $3M @JHARTFOUND grant, @AmerGeriatrics to administer GWEP coordinating center to improve #geriatrics care
New York (Jan. 20, 2016)—The John A. Hartford Foundation has awarded the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) a $3 million grant to establish a Geriatrics Workforce Enhancement Program (GWEP) Coordinating Center. As a component of the GWEP platform administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the GWEP Coordinating Center will serve as a strategic resource for 44 organizations across 29 states working on projects to increase the number of doctors, nurses, social workers, and other healthcare professionals trained to care for America’s growing older adult population.
Guidance from AGS on Diversity Proves “Seeing” Older Patients is About More than Seeing Age
As the U.S. welcomes its largest and most diverse group of older residents, insights from ethnogeriatrics specialists at the AGS shed light on health disparities and the importance of embracing culture as a critical facet of care
New York (Feb. 4, 2016)—New guidance from the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) aims to transform approaches to healthcare for our increasingly diverse older population. Developed by a committee of experts in ethnogeriatrics (the study of how ethnicity and culture impact the health and well-being of older people), “Achieving High-Quality Multicultural Geriatric Care” outlines present health disparities and the need for sensitivity to culture and health literacy when working with older individuals. As we look toward a not-so-distant future in 2050 when more than 80 million Americans will be 65-years-old or older, the factors outlined by AGS experts represent aspirational hallmarks of health care for a nation where “minorities” will soon account for nearly 40 percent of all older adults.
New Guide from AGS, NHTSA a Green Light to Promoting Safe Driving for Older Adults
New York (Feb. 16, 2016)—A newly updated guide from the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is putting healthcare professionals on the road to success for assessing and counseling older drivers. With older adults accounting for 10 percent of all people injured in traffic crashes annually and 17 percent of annual traffic fatalities, the Clinician’s Guide to Assessing and Counseling Older Drivers (3rd Edition)translates research findings and public health initiatives into practical, person-centered advice for safely navigating the open road.
“For all of us, but for Baby Boomers especially, driving is more than just a national pastime and a means for transportation. It’s a reflection of independence, mobility, and freedom,” explains Alice Pomidor, MD, MPH, AGSF, chair of the editorial board that developed the AGS-NHTSA guide. “The main goal of this guide is to help healthcare professionals promote health, independence, and quality of life by preventing crashes and injuries.”
Added Nancy E. Lundebjerg, MPA, AGS CEO: “This guide reflects the fact that many individuals play a role in older adult well-being, and that expert-authored tools, tips, and recommendations can help all healthcare professionals support high-quality, person-centered care in a key focus area: driver safety.”
Renewed Congressional Efforts to Reauthorize Older Americans Act Will Help Solidify Social and Protective Services for Older Americans
Overdue since 2011, reauthorization of the Older Americans Act has passed the U.S. House of Representatives; swift passage in the Senate would finally address a long gap in affirming important protections and programs to help older adults live independently.
New York (Mar. 21, 2016)–Representing nearly 6,000 healthcare professionals dedicated to improving the health, independence, and quality of life of older adults, the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) commends the U.S. House of Representatives on passing the Older Americans Act (OAA) Reauthorization Act of 2015, key legislation to deliver social and protective services to older Americans through 2018.
Introduced by U.S. Senators Lamar Alexander (R-TN), Patty Murray (D-WA), Richard Burr (R-NC), and Bernie Sanders (I-VT) in 2015, the bill would strengthen landmark legislation originally passed in 1965—and overdue for reauthorization since 2011. Among other objectives, the legislation aims to address elder abuse; evidence-based care; effective coordination of services at the federal, state, and local levels; and several other challenges confronting older Americans and their healthcare professionals.
“The OAA reflects our national commitment to protect and provide for generations of older Americans who helped shape the society we now share,” said AGS CEO Nancy E. Lundebjerg, MPA. “It’s important that all branches of government stand behind legislation like the OAA, which reflects the attention and respect that older adults deserve.”
Prestigious AGS Nascher/Manning Award Presented to Dr. William Hazzard, a Founding Father of Geriatrics
Dr. William Hazzard, a founding father of #geriatrics, honored with @AmerGeriatrics Nascher/Manning Award at #AGS16
New York (April 5, 2016)—William Hazzard, MD, AGSF, a founding father of geriatric medicine in the U.S., will be honored this year with the prestigious Nascher/Manning Award given biannually by the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) at its Annual Scientific Meeting (held this year May 19-21 in Long Beach, Calif.). A Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine, Section on Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Dr. Hazzard was among the first U.S. physicians to transition to geriatrics from another medical specialty. Since that time, he has helped establish three premier geriatrics programs across the country and advocated for public and private funding that now forms the bedrock of geriatrics training and research.
“The growth—but also the increasing importance—of geriatrics since the AGS was founded in 1942 is a testament to the pioneering spirit of clinicians and academic leaders like Dr. Hazzard,” notes AGS President Steven R. Counsell, MD, AGSF. “Dr. Hazzard was a voice for this new specialty in its infancy, and he remains an ardent champion for its current and future potential as someone who not only mentored the AGS but also countless researchers, healthcare professionals, and advocates across eldercare.”
Dr. Lisa Tank, Leader at First Hospital in the U.S. to Earn a Disease Specific Certification in Delirium Named AGS 2016 Clinician of the Year
Dr. Lisa Tank of @HackensackUMC @RutgersU named @AmerGeriatrics Clinician of the Year #AGS16
New York (April 5, 2016)—The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) has named Lisa Tank, MD, FACP, of Hackensack University Medical Center (HackensackUMC) and the Rutgers New Jersey Medical Center, the 2016 AGS Clinician of the Year. Among her many accomplishments spanning a career of more than 20 years, Dr. Tank led the way for HackensackUMC to become the first hospital in the nation to earn a Disease Specific Certification (DSC) in Delirium, the Joint Commission’s Gold Seal and the first geriatrics certification of its kind in the country. She will be honored for her accomplishments at the AGS 2016 Annual Scientific Meeting, May 19-21, in Long Beach, Calif.
“An AGS member since 2001, Dr. Tank is known as a highly skilled geriatrician and effective administrator who has brought those two important career paths together to advance expert eldercare,” notes AGS President Steven R. Counsell, MD, AGSF. “Dr. Tank has championed innovative clinical programs across multiple care settings and medical and surgical specialties, and she’s never lost sight of the compassion, respect, and understanding seen across her teaching and clinical practice—true hallmarks of an AGS leader.”
AGS Recognizes Dr. Laura Iglesias Lino with 2016 Arnold P. Gold Humanism in Medicine Award for Practicing Doctors
Dr. Laura Iglesias Lino honored by @AmerGeriatrics w/ #AGS16 Arnold Gold Humanism Award
New York (April 5, 2016)—The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) congratulates Laura Iglesias Lino, MD, the third recipient of its Arnold P. Gold Foundation Humanism in Medicine Award for Practicing Doctors.
“Dr. Iglesias Lino has played a critical role in care planning for vulnerable older adults in her community, a key area of focus for the AGS,” said AGS President Steven R. Counsell, MD, AGSF. “Colleagues recognize Dr. Iglesias Lino’s commitment to embracing the network of friends, family, and caregivers who are vital contributors to the care continuum. This is something at the heart of an award for recognizing compassionate clinician leaders.”
An Assistant Professor of Medicine at Baystate Medical Center, Tufts University School of Medicine, Dr. Iglesias Lino has dedicated her career to interweaving geriatrics and palliative care to improve older adult health. Caring for some of her community’s most disenfranchised elders, Dr. Iglesias Lino has served as a vital link to healthcare resources for Springfield’s Latino community, as well as vulnerable Ukrainian, Moldavian, and Russian older adults, among other groups. At the health center where she works, Dr. Iglesias Lino is focusing on the frailest patients with dementia, developing a program to improve the quality of care delivered to this group of elders.
Dr. Thomas T. Yoshikawa, Veterans Affairs Geriatrics Physician and JAGS Editor, Honored with AGS Public Service Award for Commitment to Geriatrics
Dr. Thomas Yoshikawa, outgoing @AGSJournal editor, to be honored w/ @AmerGeriatrics Public Service Award at #AGS16
New York (April 5, 2016)—Thomas T. Yoshikawa, MD, AGSF, outgoing Editor in Chief of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society who helmed the publication for more than 15 years, will be honored by members of the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) this May with one of their highest awards: the David H. Solomon Memorial Public Service Award.
“Dr. Yoshikawa’s leadership of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society is but one example of his influence, and it speaks to the core of the AGS mission,” noted AGS President Steven R. Counsell, MD, AGSF. “Dr. Yoshikawa’s commitment to public service has made our journal a comprehensive resource for geriatrics healthcare professionals, but also for the many other specialists who care for older adults and aim to deliver high-quality, person-centered care.”
AGS Honors Dr. Annie Medina-Walpole, Leading Geriatrics Educator in N.Y. Committed to Addressing Workforce Shortage Among Geriatrics Experts
@AmerGeriatrics honors Dr. Annie Medina-Walpole w/ #AGS16 Jahnigen Memorial Public Service Award
New York (April 5, 2016)—The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) today announced that Annette (Annie) Medina-Walpole, MD, AGSF, a leading geriatrics clinician and educator at the University of Rochester (UR) in New York, will be honored with the 2016 Dennis W. Jahnigen Memorial Public Service Award. Across her career, Dr. Medina-Walpole has worked tirelessly to recruit and educate more professionals equipped to care for our growing older adult population—a critical unmet need for one of the country’s fastest growing groups.
“In the clinic, at the bedside, and the classroom, Dr. Medina-Walpole has led the charge on innovative educational programs to get more students and trainees across health care interested and engaged in geriatrics,” noted AGS President Steven R. Counsell, MD, AGSF. “We already need 20,000 geriatricians to care for America’s 46 million older adults, yet today less than 7,500 certified geriatricians are practicing nationwide. Our vision for tomorrow is a reality first and foremost because AGS leaders like Dr. Medina-Walpole are stepping up to model the way for aspiring eldercare experts.”
AGS Names Dr. Christopher Callahan, Leading Alzheimer’s Researcher, 2016 Recipient of Edward Henderson Award
Dr. Chris Callahan of @IUMedSchool to be awarded @AmerGeriatrics Henderson Award, deliver Henderson Lecture at #AGS16
New York (April 5, 2016)—The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) announced that Christopher Callahan, MD, an eldercare expert in depression, dementia, and related conditions, will receive this year’s prestigious Edward Henderson Award. Dr. Callahan—the Cornelius & Yvonne Pettinga Professor of Medicine at Indiana University (IU), as well as founding Director of the IU Center for Aging Research and a Research Scientist with the Regenstrief Institute—will deliver the prestigious Henderson State-of-the-Art Lecture at the AGS Annual Scientific Meeting (May 19-21; Long Beach, Calif.) on “Alzheimer's Disease: Individuals, Dyads, Communities, and Costs.” His presentation will focus on an extensive body of research addressing care for older adults with Alzheimer’s disease, the sixth leading cause of death in the U.S. and one of the only leading causes of mortality that cannot presently be prevented or cured.
“Across his more than 25-year career, Dr. Callahan has raised the bar for geriatrics research and expertise by expanding our understanding of what it means to deliver high-quality, person-centered care,” notes AGS President Steven R. Counsell, MD, AGSF. “Dr. Callahan’s commitment to dementia care models has led to new ways of thinking about managing Alzheimer’s disease in health systems that are now more integrated and more collaborative.”
AGS Raises Concerns on Cuts to Training, Research in President Trump’s Proposed Budget
New York (Mar. 16, 2017)—The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) expressed its deep disappointment with proposed cuts to geriatrics training, healthcare research, and a range of services for older adults—all outlined by President Trump in his budget plan for 2018.
Among several concerns, the AGS noted that the budget would eliminate $403 million from training programs that educate the doctors, nurses, physician assistants, pharmacists, social workers, and many other health professionals essential to our care as we age. The Trump proposal is premised on a flawed assumption that health professions and nursing training programs “lack evidence that they significantly improve the Nation’s health workforce.”
“We are especially concerned about the potential impact of these cuts on the Geriatrics Workforce Enhancement Program (GWEP) under Titles VII and VIII,” said Nancy E. Lundebjerg, MPA, Chief Executive Officer of the AGS. “This is the only federal program aimed at improving the quality, safety, and affordability of our care by increasing the number of professionals with the skills needed to care for us as we age.”
Older Americans Act Reauthorization Act of 2015 Passes U.S. Senate
Reauthorization of the Older Americans Act has passed the U.S. Senate and will now be sent to President Obama for his signature, ending a long gap in affirming important programs serving older adults.
New York (April 8, 2016)–Representing nearly 6,000 healthcare professionals dedicated to improving the health, independence, and quality of life of older adults, the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) commends the U.S. Senate on passing a House-amended version of the Older Americans Act (OAA) Reauthorization Act of 2015, key legislation to deliver social and protective services to older Americans through 2018.
Introduced by U.S. Senators Lamar Alexander (R-TN), Patty Murray (D-WA), Richard Burr (R-NC), and Bernie Sanders (I-VT) in 2015, the bill will strengthen landmark legislation originally passed in 1965—and overdue for reauthorization since 2011. Among other objectives, the legislation aims to address elder abuse; evidence-based care; effective coordination of services at the federal, state, and local levels; and several other challenges confronting older Americans and their healthcare professionals.
“The OAA reflects our national commitment to protect and provide for generations of older Americans who helped shape the society we now share,” said AGS CEO Nancy E. Lundebjerg, MPA. “It’s important that all branches of government stand behind legislation like the OAA, which reflects the attention and respect that older adults deserve.”
AGS Honors Expert & Emerging Geriatrics Leaders at 2016 Annual Scientific Meeting
New York (April 11, 2016)—The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) annually honors researchers, clinicians, educators, and emerging health professionals who have made outstanding contributions to high-quality, patient-centered care for older adults. This year’s award recipients include more than 15 leaders representing the breadth of disciplines championing elder care in the U.S.
Arnold P. Gold Foundation Humanism in Medicine Award for Practicing Doctors
- Laura Iglesias Lino, MD (Baystate Medical Center, Tufts University School of Medicine)
Choosing Wisely® Champion Awards
- Heidi-Ann Courtney, PA-C (Baystate Medical Center)
- Ariel R. Green, MD, MPH (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine)
Clinician of the Year Award
- Lisa Tank, MD, FACP (Hackensack University Medical Center; Rutgers New Jersey Medical Center)
Clinical Student Research Award
- Margaret Puelle, BS (University of Michigan)
David H. Solomon Memorial Public Service Award
- Thomas T. Yoshikawa, MD, AGSF (Editor-in-Chief, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society; Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Health Care System; University of California at Los Angeles; Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science)
Dennis W. Jahnigen Memorial Award
Innovations in Care, Research, Policy Fueling Future Progress for 46 Million Older Adults at 2016 AGS Annual Scientific Meeting
New York (April 12, 2016)—Multifaceted programs to prevent the use of potentially inappropriate medications, efforts to reduce certain unnecessary medical procedures, and novel interventions for linking particularly vulnerable older adults to Medicare are among headline presentations anchoring the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) Annual Scientific Meeting (AGS16), held May 19-21 at the Long Beach Convention & Entertainment Center in Long Beach, Calif.
Presentations at the prestigious Plenary Paper Session at AGS16 (May 19, 10-11 a.m.) represent some of geriatrics most promising scholarship as assessed by peer experts and program planners from a pool of more than 800 abstract submissions. This year’s highlights include:
AGS Opens 2016 Annual Meeting Welcoming Second Nurse President
New York (May 10, 2016)—As more than 2,000 geriatrics experts prepare to converge on the West Coast to advance quality care for older adults, they will also toast the expanding professional breadth of geriatrics itself: Ellen Flaherty, PhD, APRN, AGSF, a member of the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) for nearly two decades, will become the Society’s 63rd President at the start of the 2016 AGS Annual Scientific Meeting, held May 19-21 at the Long Beach Convention and Entertainment Center in Long Beach, Calif.
“What a remarkable privilege it is to be named AGS President. I’ve been a proud AGS member for 18 years, and it will be an honor to step into this role as an advocate for geriatrics and for older adults,” said Dr. Flaherty. “I’m particularly proud to be the second nurse member to hold this position. You could say that nursing and geriatrics are in my DNA: both my mother and sister are nurses, and I began my career in geriatrics volunteering in a nursing home as a teenager. It’s been such a rewarding career ever since.”
New Award from AGS Celebrates Outstanding Scientific Achievement in Honor of Thomas & Catherine Yoshikawa
Named in honor of two pillars of geriatrics who advanced clinical leadership and health scholarship for more than two decades, this new distinction from the AGS will support emerging clinician-investigators beginning in 2017
- New Thomas & Catherine Yoshikawa Award from @AmerGeriatrics celebrates legacy of scientific achievement in #geriatrics
Long Beach, Calif. (May 19, 2016)—The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) and its Health in Aging Foundation today announced their newest honor for recognizing excellence in geriatrics research: the Thomas and Catherine Yoshikawa Award for Outstanding Scientific Achievement in Clinical Investigation. Named in honor of Dr. Thomas T. Yoshikawa and his wife, Catherine—who together served the AGS and the geriatrics community for more than two decades—the Yoshikawa Award will offer recognition and financial support to emerging eldercare scholars who represent the early promise of the Yoshikawas’ own illustrious career.
“AGS leaders are delighted to be celebrating Tom and Cathy Yoshikawa with this named award,” said Nancy E. Lundebjerg, MPA, CEO of the AGS. “The award criteria reflect their commitment to fostering clinical research and to mentoring investigators at all stages of their careers.”
AGS Continues Conference Series Exploring Cutting-Edge Geriatrics Thanks to Prestigious NIA/NIH “U13” Program
More than $173,000 from the nation’s penultimate research body will support a series of scientific conferences pushing eldercare expertise to meet the needs of America’s growing older adult population.
New York (June 17, 2016)—The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) will continue a series of prestigious scientific conferences on emerging issues in geriatrics thanks to sustained funding from the National Institute on Aging (NIA) as part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Research Conference Cooperative Agreement (or “U13”) Program. More than $173,000 in funding over five years will enable the AGS to continue coordinating U13 “bench-to-bedside” conferences on new topics pertinent to older adults. This recently funded series will focus on developing and prioritizing an actionable agenda related to multimorbidity by focusing each of three conferences on a common and clinically important pair of co-existing chronic conditions: sensory impairment and cognitive decline, osteoporosis and soft tissue (muscle/fat) disorders, and cancer and cardiovascular disease. Since 2004 the AGS has worked with the NIA through the NIH U13 Program to explore and clarify insights on the cutting-edge of geriatrics, having addressed sleep and circadian rhythms (2015) and delirium (2014) in recent years.
AGS Commends CMS Proposed Medicare Payment Policies to Improve Care for the Chronically Ill
New York (July 12, 2016)—The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) commends the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) for continuing to support improved payment for services provided to Medicare beneficiaries with multiple chronic conditions as part of the 2017 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Proposed Rule. As a result of ongoing advocacy from the AGS and other specialties, CMS has proposed making payment for a number of services provided to chronically ill older adults—changes which dramatically improve current payment for chronic care management and management of people transitioning from hospital care to the home.
These proposals, which will take effect in 2017 if finalized, recognize much of the cognitive work that geriatrics healthcare professionals, primary care providers, and other cognitive specialists currently and regularly provide—until now without reimbursement—to those with chronic and acute illnesses. We thank CMS for recognizing the value and importance of this care and believe that it will dramatically improve the ability of many providers to keep older adults out of the hospital and emergency room.
New Editorial & Virtual Journal Issue Commemorate Key Research that Shaped Geriatrics from 2000-2015
Experts from across geriatrics assessed research published since the new millennium to identify 20 seminal articles on everything from cognition and physical disabilities to frailty and medication use
- New @AGSJournal editorial, virtual issue commemorate 20 studies that shaped #geriatrics from 2000-2015
New York (Aug. 24, 2016)—A new editorial and corresponding virtual journal issue offer a look back at 20 of the most important studies impacting older adult care as published by the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS) from 2000 to 2015.
This retrospective on nearly two decades of scholarship provides perspective on how geriatrics, gerontology, and long-term care evolved since the new millennium, and where and why that progress continues to impact the present and future of eldercare expertise. Thomas T. Yoshikawa, MD, AGSF—who served as Editor-in-Chief of JAGS during this timeframe—authored the editorial outlining article selections with current Executive Editor Joseph G. Ouslander, MD, AGSF, and new JAGS Editor-in-Chief William B. Applegate, MD, MPH, MACP, AGSF.
Medicare to Cover Key Services Championed by AGS to Improve Care for Chronically Ill
New York (Nov. 4, 2016)—This week, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released the Final 2017 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Rule showing their continued support for reimbursing services provided to Medicare beneficiaries with multiple chronic conditions.
As a result of ongoing advocacy from the AGS and our fellow stakeholders, these proposals, which will take effect in 2017, recognize much of the cognitive work that geriatrics healthcare professionals, primary care providers, and other cognitive specialists currently and regularly provide—until now without reimbursement.
Starting Jan. 1, 2017, CMS will recognize the following services for Medicare beneficiaries:
AGS Sets Sights on Better Care, More Responsive Policies for “Unbefriended” Older Adults
Experts call for “national effort” supporting older adults who are already or might soon be “unbefriended”—a term for those who lack designated decision-makers and are no longer able to make medical decisions on their own.
New York (Nov. 22, 2016)—Experts at the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) today unveiled new guidance on care and decision-making for a unique and growing group of older adults: the “unbefriended.” Proposed clinical practice and public policy changes would support some of society’s most vulnerable individuals while also helping protect more of us from becoming unbefriended as we age.
The “unbefriended” lack the capacity to provide informed consent to medical treatment, often due to declines in physical and/or mental well-being. But these individuals face added challenges because they have no written outline of their care preferences and also have no identified “surrogate,” such as a family member or friend, to assist in medical decision-making when needed. Baby boomers are at particular risk for becoming unbefriended, since more than 10 million boomers live alone and as many as 20 percent have no children.
In Letters to President-Elect Trump and Congress, AGS Highlights Programs Essential to Supporting Older Adults
On behalf of older adults, caregivers, and health professionals, AGS reiterates its commitment to work collaboratively to strengthen clinical care and nurture workforce equipped to care for us all as we age.
New York (Jan. 12, 2017)—In letters to President-elect Donald Trump and Congress, the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) has reinforced the importance of collaborating to support older Americans through critical programs and policies.
“In our letters, we focused on programs that are critical to the clinical care of older Americans and their families, and to ensuring that we have a workforce with the skills and competence to care for us all as we age,” notes Nancy E. Lundebjerg, MPA, Chief Executive Officer of the AGS. “We look forward to working with the Administration and Congress on public policy solutions that will achieve our vision for a future when every older American receives high‐quality, person‐centered care.”
As outlined by the AGS, that vision for the future involves federal and state policies that continue to:
AGS Extends Hip Fracture Co-Management Program That Sees Geriatrics Mending More Than Bones
New York (Jan. 24, 2017)— With $1.4 million in renewed support from The John A. Hartford Foundation, the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) will launch a new national program that positions geriatricians and geriatrics-trained clinicians as co-managers with orthopedic surgeons to improve care and health outcomes, while lowering costs, for older adults with hip fractures.
Geriatrics-orthopedics co-management incorporates a geriatrics approach to care as soon as possible after an older person enters the hospital for a hip fracture, helping to identify and reduce the risk for harmful events ranging from falls and delirium to infections. The model has been shown to reduce length of stay, re-admissions, and most complications, and to increase an older person’s chances of going home directly from the hospital, often resulting in improved function and independence.
Hip fractures hospitalize more than 260,000 older adults annually, and could hospitalize 500,000 older adults each year by 2040. They are the third most costly diagnosis in the U.S., totaling more than $18 billion in 2012.
AGS Statement on Discrimination Based on Race, Color, Religion, Gender, Disability, Age, or National Origin
New York (Jan. 31, 2017)—The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) opposes discrimination against healthcare professionals or older people based on race, color, religion, gender (including gender identity, sexual orientation, and pregnancy), disability, age, or national origin. We believe that such discriminatory practices can have a negative impact on public health, especially the health of older Americans and vulnerable older people.
We are particularly concerned about the impact on the healthcare workforce of the recent Executive Order (EO), "Protection of the Nation from Foreign Terrorist Entry into the United States," issued by the President of the United States on January 27, 2017. The EO imposes a 90-day suspension on visas and other immigration benefits for citizens of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen attempting to travel to the United States.
The AGS values the significant contributions of health professionals from diverse backgrounds to the care of older people. For almost two decades, we have focused on helping health professionals better understand how to care for the diverse population of older adults. In addition, our international colleagues have advanced our understanding of how to care for older adults through contributions to our journals, meetings, and publications.
American Geriatrics Society Addresses American Health Care Act
New York (March 9, 2017)—As an organization dedicated to the health and well-being of us all as we age, the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) today voiced opposition to several components of the newly released American Health Care Act—legislation to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA), and legislation AGS experts believe would harm access to key health services for older adults, caregivers, and healthcare professionals.
“Policy changes that would increase costs, reduce coverage, or cut benefits put health, independence, and quality of life at risk for all of us as we age,” notes Nancy E. Lundebjerg, MPA, Chief Executive Officer of the AGS. “We are committed to working with Congress and the Trump Administration on meaningful reforms that would improve health care, for example, by reducing regulatory burdens, but we continue to oppose changes like those proposed in the American Health Care Act, which might jeopardize access to high-quality, person-centered, and affordable health coverage for all older Americans.”
New Collaboration Looks for Trans-Atlantic Common Ground in Geriatrics
New York (March 17, 2017)—Healthcare professionals across the Atlantic and around the world need to think beyond single-disease guidelines as they look to provide high-quality, person-centered care for more and more older adults living with multiple chronic conditions, so say editors from the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society and the British Geriatrics Society's (BGS's) Age and Ageing in the first from a series of joint editorials launched today. The series will look for common ground in geriatrics "across the pond," beginning here with the U.K.'s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guideline on multimorbidity, the medical term for those living with several chronic health concerns.
"The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guideline on multi-morbidity challenges physicians and health care providers to adopt an holistic approach that takes full and proper account of multimorbidity. It addresses a common flaw in all contemporary health services that frail, multi-morbid patients are often subjected to futile or even harmful investigations and treatments," note David J. Stott, MBChB, MD, FRCP, and John Young, MSc, authors of the BGS editorial and Editor-in-Chief and Associate Editor, respectively, of Age and Ageing.
“Safe Driving” Campaign Kicks Into Gear During World Health Day and National Public Health Week
The American Geriatrics Society and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration roll out "Safe Driving" campaign for older adults
New York (April 4, 2017)—With support from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), the American Geriatrics Society’s (AGS’s) Health in Aging Foundation today announced the start of a public information campaign focused on helping older adults and caregivers access resources for safely navigating the open road. The campaign features a toolkit providing actionable safe driving tips, advice on how to have important conversations with older adults about driving limitations, and ways to continue being mobile and independent when personal driving is no longer a safe option.
Distributed during National Public Health Week (April 3-9) in the U.S., the toolkit’s release also coincides with World Health Day—Friday, April 7th—focusing this year on depression prevention, a significant concern for older adults who discontinue driving but are not aware of transportation alternatives for maintaining independence. The AGS’s safe driving campaign specifically provides information to these older adults and their caregivers to help them identify resources available to promote mobility, independence, and freedom to maintain physical and mental well-being. With the number of older adult drivers rapidly increasing—already up thirty-four percent in 2012 versus 1999—the need for resources to help us all practice safe driving as we age has never been greater.
Increased Funding for Geriatrics Education Essential, Study
New York (April 19, 2017)—Without a substantial increase in federal funding for geriatrics education and research we risk further decimating a workforce that is essential to training health professionals on the unique healthcare needs of older adults, say researchers reporting on the impact that Geriatrics Academic Career Awards (GACAs) have had on geriatrics academic careers, health professional training, and the care of older adults. In an article for the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, interprofessional experts looked at the impact of the GACA program, which served as a vital resource for more than 200 geriatrics clinicians and educators before it was eliminated as part of a consolidation of several geriatrics training programs in 2015.
Qualitative and quantitative results from the research team’s survey of GACA recipients point not only to a growing need for geriatrics skills but also to the importance of dedicated time and financial support to develop emerging geriatrics faculty for training a U.S. healthcare workforce with the skills and knowledge to optimally care for older adults:
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