FSU College of Medicine Reynolds Grant
The Hospital Elder Life Program
The Hospital Elder Life Program (HELP), which was established at
Tallahassee Memorial Healthcare, Inc. in February 2007, is an
innovative model of care designed to prevent functional and
cognitive decline of older persons during hospitalization. The
original model was conducted at Yale University, and the results
were published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 1999.
The HELP model has been replicated in twenty-five community and
teaching hospitals across the United States. The goals of HELP
are to:
- maintain cognitive and physical functioning of high-risk older
- adults throughout hospitalization;
- maximize patients' independence at discharge;
- assist patients with the transition from hospital to home; and
- prevent unplanned hospital readmissions.
Patients aged 70 years or greater on specified units are
screened on admission for six risk factors:
- Cognitive impairment
- Sleep deprivation
- Immobility
- Dehydration
- Vision
- Hearing impairment
Targeted interventions for these risk factors are implemented by
an interdisciplinary team-including a geriatric nurse
specialist, Elder Life Specialists, trained volunteers, and
geriatricians-who work closely with primary nurses. Other
experts provide consultation at twice-weekly interdisciplinary
rounds. Quality assurance procedures and performance reviews are
an integral part of the program.
Interventions are carried out by a skilled interdisciplinary
team and trained volunteers. HELP staff—an Elder Life Specialist
and Elder Life Nurse Specialist—assess older hospital patients
to identify risks and determine which interventions are
appropriate, based on each patient's needs. Patients receive
personalized interventions that evolve to match their changing
needs throughout the course of hospitalization.
Trained HELP volunteers provide assistance to counter the
effects of immobility. Examples of interventions performed by
trained volunteers include taking patients for walks; reducing
their need for sleep sedatives by giving them warm milk and back
rubs, and playing relaxation recordings at night; and helping to
keep them mentally active by playing word games and discussing
current events. Nurses monitor patients for signs of delirium
and work with patients' physicians and other providers to
provide evidence-based geriatric care.
HELP is supported by information technology designed to prompt
and document recommended interventions, track patient progress,
and report clinical and financial performance. |