Title: Medical Social Integration from a Family Doctors Perspective
1Medical Social Integration from a Family Doctors
Perspective
2- What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult? - Why family doctors are in the best position to
deliver community elderly care? - Case example to demonstrate why medical and
social integration is necessary for the delivery
of optimal community elderly care. - What are the obstacles of providing elderly cares
by family doctors?
3What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult?
- Elderly patients commonly have multiple problems,
including medical, mental and social conditions.
Chronic illnesses also are more common in the old
population. - The elders have decreased reserve capability.
- The presentation of a sick elder is commonly
atypical.
4What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult?
- When people get old, changes in body composition
make older people more vulnerable to adverse drug
reactions. - The intellectual decline, together with multiple
physical deficits will cause problems in
communication. - Caring for frail elders requires both
multidimensional and multidisciplinary management.
5What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult?
- The elderly population is heterogeneous. That is
to say, for the same age group of elders, their
health status is not uniform and there is
tremendous variation. - As people age they become more individual and
differentiated. There is increasing variability
with age - among individual and among levels of
functioning from day to day.
6What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult?
- Because of this variability, chronological age
per se has lost its meaning as a marker of
personal capacity. - As a general rule while managing sick elders,
care becomes more important than cure and
function more important than diagnosis.
7What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult?
8What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult?
- In the care of elderly patients, family members
provide the majority of care necessary to keep
their frail elders in the community. - Therefore, a visit to the doctors office often
includes the family caregiver accompanying the
elderly person. Thus the doctor-patient
encounter, which is commonly dyadic becomes
triadic.
9What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult?
- The role of the caregiver during these visits may
not always be predictable it may be facilitative
, supportive or neutral. It can also be
antagonistic, such as the co-opting of an agenda
to meet the caregivers own needs. Therefore,
doctors need to have good communication skill in
triadic encounter. - Furthermore, in the care of their elderly
patients, doctors may find themselves not only
assisting caregivers in problem-solving and
referral to community resources but also
assessing the caregivers health and coping
skills.
10What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult?
- Caring for elders is stressful the caregiver is
encompassed with the physical, social,
psychological, and financial toll of providing
care. The caregivers become the hidden victims.
- Recent finding has shown that family caregiving
is an independent risk factor for mortality among
elderly spousal caregivers.
11What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult?
- Informal caregivers have a higher level of
depression, more likely to experience physical
pain, and more likely to experience financial
stress. - Failure by doctors to recognize the burden on
informal caregivers may result in long term
adverse outcome on this group that may outweigh
the benefits of managing people with disability
and chronic illness in the community.
12What are the differences between caring for a
sick elder and a sick young adult?
- Caring for the caregiver, thereby reducing
caregiver burden and helping with care-recipient
problems, could result in great benefit for the
patient, informal caregiver and for the larger
community. - Doctors who look after the family and know the
family function well, they are most suitable in
the healthcare systems to assist both the frail
elderly and their family informal caregivers.
13Why family doctors are in the best position to
deliver community elderly care?
- Are readily available and affordable.
- Are accustomed to provide holistic and family
care. - The family doctor seeks to understand the context
of the illness. Many illnesses cannot be fully
understood unless they are seen in their personal
, family and social context. When a patient is
admitted to the hospital, much of the context of
the illness is removed or obscured. Therefore, it
is not unreasonable for hospitalized elders
request their family doctors to pay visits to
them.
14Why family doctors are in the best position to
deliver community elderly care?
- Family doctors provide continuity of care and
there is evidence that continuity of care is
associated with patient satisfaction, decreased
hospitalizations and emergency department visits
and improved receipt of preventive services. - The family doctor views his or her practice as a
population at risk. Always think patients in
terms of both as single and population groups.
This concept is important for the delivery of
anticipatory care.
15Why family doctors are in the best position to
deliver community elderly care?
- They have earned trust from the family long
before seeing the patient. - They have owned comprehensive knowledge of their
patients. - They practice patient-centered communication in
such a way that it is correlated with the
patients and caregivers perception of finding
common ground.
16Why family doctors are in the best position to
deliver community elderly care?
- They practice learnt communication skills
(triadic encounter, poor historians). - They are used to deliver coordinated care.
- They are frontline doctors therefore they are in
the best position to offer preventive care and
functional geriatric assessment. - They are keen to establish good patient-doctor
relationship since it has always been their first
priority. - They advocate the practice of evidence-based
medicine
17Case example to demonstrate the importance of
medical and social integration
- Mrs. Lau a 72-year-old, type II diabetic.
- Caregiver for her husband who is also one of my
patients. - Mr. Lau, in addition to coronary artery disease,
has hypertension, osteoarthritis, cataract, gout,
anxiety, and had a stroke three years ago.
18Case example to demonstrate the importance of
medical and social integration
- She complained to me during one of the regular
follow ups that she was getting tired easily,
losing weight, and lack interest in many things
despite good blood glucose level control. - I routinely enquired for caregiver stress, she
suddenly bursted into tears and frankly admitted
that she was disturbed by her husbands unusual
behaviour.
19Case example to demonstrate the importance of
medical and social integration
- For the last few months, her husband had become
very unreasonable, stubborn, irritable, and
sometimes acting strangely. She began to has
negative thoughts such as she was not wanted any
more, she was not good enough for him, and they
could no longer tolerate one another. Since she
did not think that it was a medical problem,
therefore she did not come for help. She became
helpless and was trying hard to find the solution
herself. She had decided that if the problem
could not be solved, she would have to send him
to an OAH.
20 The analysis
- The longstanding doctor-patient relationship and
knowledge of the medical and social background of
the family helped me to spot the following
problems. - Mrs. Laus family, in addition to the underlying
medical problems, there were undetected new
medical problems and social problems. - In this case, the new medical problems had
emerged as a complication of her husbands
underlying medical diseases.
21 The analysis
- The new medical problems were
- Dementia and depression
- which are common in elders with multiple
chronic diseases, especially those with a
history of stroke. - The social problems were
- Caregiver stress.
- Imminent family breakdown.
- Mr. Lau would have to be transferred to OAH
against his will.
22 The management
- I explained to her that the situation was not the
same as what she thought instead it was the
consequence of the new medical problems. I
provided information about the management of the
current situation. It was very effective in
mitigating her emotional sufferings. I further
offered non-drug, and drug treatment to Mr. Lau.
Eventually the problem was solved. Additionally,
Mrs. Lau was also screened for hidden
psychological problem.
23 The management
- In order to solve the social problems that came
with the medical problem, namely dementia, I had
also discussed with the family about referral to
social services where supports for caregivers and
dementia patients are being provided.
24The importance of medical and social integration
- Had I not enquired about the social situation
(caregiver stress), I would have missed Mr.
Laus medical problem. - On the other hand, the social problems would not
have been solved unless the medical problem was
detected and managed.
25The importance of medical and social integration
- Doctors usually pay attention to medical problem
and ignore social problem, but in the management
of community elderly patients, holistic
management is always necessary. Very often, in
order to solve the elders problem, the doctor
has to integrate the medical and social
situations so as to find the solution to help the
elderly patient and family.
26What are the obstacles of providing geriatric
cares by family doctors?
- The private family doctor do not have sufficient
government support. - By and large, continuity of care is not viewed
important in the care of elderly patients both by
the public and government. - The one way referral system preposterously
operating in Hong Kong , makes it extremely
difficult for family doctor to manage and follow
sick elders.
27What are the obstacles of providing geriatric
cares by family doctors?
- The family doctors do not have interdisciplinary
team support which is often required for the care
of elderly patients. - There are few if any, private and public health
care services integration. -
28What are the obstacles of providing geriatric
cares by family doctors?
- Do not have adequate geriatric medicine training.
Fortunately, there are courses like PDCG and
PDCPM in Hong Kong that can help to supplement
the family doctors knowledge. - Ageism exists even among medical professionals.
Comments such as old people are all similar and
there is little value of doing anything for them
are often heard. - Communication problem resulting from cognitive
impairment is one of the many reasons why doctors
are reluctant to see elderly patients.
29What are the obstacles of providing geriatric
cares by family doctors?
- Family doctors role in OAH is made in such a way
that it is replaceable and expandable. He is not
sharing the leadership role in the management. - Provision of preventive services by family doctor
is difficult because of financial constraint. - Time constraint.
- Reimbursement and remuneration.
30 References
- 1. The dementia caregiver-a primary care
approach. Stuti Dang et al, South Med J. 2008
Dec 101(12)1246-51. - 2. Family medicine attributes related to
satisfaction, health and costs, Mireia
Sans-Corrales et al., Fam Pract. 2006
Jun23(3)308-16. - 3. Physician Perspectives on the elderly
patient-family caregiver-physician encounter.
Mark J. Yaffe et al., IMAJ 20024785-789 - 4.The physicians role in nursing home care an
overview. M E Williams, Geriatrics 1990
Jan45(1)47-9. - 5. A textbook of family medicine, 2nd edition,
Ian R McWhinney.