Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T12:31:12.602Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Role of Emergency Medical Services in Geriatrics: Bridging the Gap between Primary and Acute Care

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2015

Judah Goldstein*
Affiliation:
Emergency Health Services Nova Scotia, Dartmouth, NS Division of Emergency Medical Services
Jennifer McVey
Affiliation:
Emergency Health Services Nova Scotia, Dartmouth, NS Division of Emergency Medical Services Department of Emergency Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS
Stacy Ackroyd-Stolarz
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS
*
Correspondence to: Judah Goldstein, Emergency Health Services Nova Scotia, 300-239 Brownlow Ave, Dartmouth, NS, B3B 2B2; Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Caring for older adults is a major function of emergency medical services (EMS). Traditional EMS systems were designed to treat single acute conditions; this approach contrasts with best practices for the care of frail older adults. Care might be improved by the early identification of those who are frail and at highest risk for adverse outcomes. Paramedics are well positioned to play an important role via a more thorough evaluation of frailty (or vulnerability). These findings may inform both pre-hospital and subsequent emergency department (ED) based decisions. Innovative programs involving EMS, the ED, and primary care could reduce the workload on EDs while improving patient access to care, and ultimately patient outcomes. Some frail older adults will benefit from the resources and specialized knowledge provided by the ED, while others may be better helped in alternative ways, usually in coordination with primary care. Discerning between these groups is a challenge worthy of further inquiry. In either case, care should be timely, with a focus on identifying emergent or acute care needs, frailty evaluation, mobility assessments, identifying appropriate goals for treatment, promoting functional independence, and striving to have the patient return to their usual place of residence if this can be done safely. Paramedics are uniquely positioned to play a larger role in the care of our aging population. Improving paramedic education as it pertains to geriatrics is a critical next step.

Résumé

La prestation des soins aux personnes âgées occupe une place importante dans les services médicaux d’urgence (SMU). Les systèmes de SMU étaient conçus au départ pour traiter des affections aiguës isolées, ce qui est très différent des pratiques exemplaires en matière de soins aux personnes âgées fragiles. Le repérage précoce des personnes âgées fragiles, fortement prédisposées à des événements défavorables pourrait améliorer la prestation des soins. Les ambulanciers paramédicaux sont bien placés pour jouer un rôle important dans une évaluation approfondie du degré de fragilité (ou de vulnérabilité), et les résultats obtenus peuvent éclairer les décisions prises par les fournisseurs de services préhospitaliers et, par la suite, dans les services d’urgence (SU). Des programmes innovateurs de SMU, de soins dans les SU et de soins de base pourraient réduire la charge de travail dans les SU tout en améliorant l’accès aux soins et, en dernier ressort, les résultats cliniques. Certaines personnes âgées fragiles pourraient profiter des ressources disponibles dans les SU et du bagage cumulé de connaissances spécialisées, tandis que d’autres profiteraient davantage d’autres solutions, habituellement d’une meilleure coordination des soins de base. Toutefois, cela vaudrait la peine de faire davantage de recherche afin de distinguer les deux groupes. Dans un cas comme dans l’autre, il faudrait donner des soins au bon moment, en plus de déterminer la nécessité de fournir des soins d’urgence ou des soins de courte durée; d’évaluer le degré de fragilité et de mobilité; d’établir la pertinence des buts du traitement; de promouvoir l’autonomie fonctionnelle et de favoriser autant que possible le retour en toute sécurité au lieu habituel d’habitation. Les ambulanciers paramédicaux occupent une place privilégiée pour jouer un rôle accru dans la prestation des soins à la population âgée. L’amélioration de leur formation en gériatrie est donc la prochaine étape cruciale.

Type
Editorial/Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians 2015 

Introduction

Older adults (≥65 years of age) are the most rapidly growing segment of society. In 2011, there were five million people over the age of 65 in Canada; this is expected to double by 2036. 1 Older age is a major determinant of EMS and ED use;Reference Svenson 2 age does not fully explain usage trends, particularly in those over 85 yearsReference Lowthian, Jolley and Curtis 3 . Other explanations include an increased proportion of older adults living alone, reduced capacity of caregivers, and difficulties accessing primary care.Reference Lowthian, Jolley and Curtis 3 Close to half of EMS emergency responses in Canadian populations (and other developed countries) are for older adults,Reference Shah, Bazarian and Lerner 4 - Reference Goldstein, Jensen and Carter 6 and it is expected that EMS usage will continue to riseReference Lowthian, Jolley and Curtis 3 .

Patient complexity will also have an impact on resource requirements, in addition to the increasing call volume. Frailty is common in older adults seeking emergency care.Reference Hastings, Purser and Johnson 7 - Reference Goldstein, Hubbard and Moorhouse 9 Frailty can be characterized as a state of weakness, slowness, weight loss, exhaustion, and low physical activity.Reference Fried, Tangen and Walston 10 Alternatively, it has been described as an accumulation of deficits or health problems.Reference Mitnitski, Mogilner and Rockwood 11 Frailty is an independent predictor of poor outcomes in the ED population,Reference Hastings, Purser and Johnson 7 , Reference Joseph, Pandit and Rhee 12 and is also predictive of morbidity, mortality, and adverse events in critically ill patientsReference Bagshaw, Stelfox and McDermid 13 . It can be challenging for ED staff to have the time and resources required to accurately identify frailty. This often requires collateral details not available in the ED, and these details may be difficult to obtain if family or caregivers are not present. Even so, much of the information necessary for determining frailty could be gathered within the patient’s residence. Paramedics are present in the living environments of patients, and are able to obtain information that may suggest whether the patient is at risk, or appropriately resourced in their home (e.g., cleanliness, lack of food, medication management, mobility aids). The opportunity for paramedics to gather more detailed information from the homes and caregivers of older adults exists.Reference Goldstein, Hubbard and Moorhouse 9 The acquisition and documentation of these data could form mandatory fields for the patient’s pre-hospital care record.

Even though we must be cognizant of EMS time spent on task, gathering valid information and ensuring that it is transferred effectively during patient handover could lead to improved system efficiencies. The length of time paramedics spend with patients is increasing, due to ED overcrowding (off-load delay)Reference Cooney, Millin and Carter 14 and prolonged transports resulting from the closure of smaller centers. This contact time may represent an opportunity for paramedics to play a larger role, by using it to perform more detailed assessments, and to grade frailty. This information would inform subsequent decisions made in the ED phase of care, pertaining to treatment goals, diagnostic tests and treatments provided, engagement of human resources (e.g., social work), as well as patient disposition.

Opportunities currently exist to better integrate EMS systems into the health care continuum during a health crisis. Paramedics are in an ideal position in that they span the divide between acute and community care. They can be active collaborators in care provision, are accessible, and can play a supportive role to other health care practitioners during a health crisis. This new approach strives to deliver the right resources (equipment, procedural skills, and cognitive skills) to the right patient in the right place at the right time.Reference Martinez and Carr 15 EMS can facilitate this process.

Novel programs are being developed to better integrate primary, home, continuing, and acute care by engaging paramedics in non-traditional ways.Reference Jensen, Travers and Bardua 16 , Reference Mason, Knowles and Freeman 17 “Traditional scope” EMS refers to the provision of out-of-hospital acute care and transport to the ED by ambulance. This can now be thought of as a component of what contemporary EMS systems may offer. “Expanded scope” EMS refers to a variety of programs that engage paramedics in non-traditional scopes of practice, or in novel roles in the health care system. “Community paramedicine” represents a diverse array of programs involving paramedics with expanded scopes or roles in non-acute settings (e.g., fall prevention, wellness checks, chronic disease monitoring). Paramedics performing detailed geriatric assessments during acute care is one way in which the scope of practice may be expanded. We will argue why this may be of benefit.

Another opportunity exists “upstream” during the acute phase of care, before the paramedics have even initiated transport of the patient to the ED. Paramedics could learn to screen for medical necessity of an ED visit. A paramedic with additional training and assessment skills, armed with alternative referral and disposition options, could safely determine which older adults require an ED visit and which are better cared for by community resources. Many EMS activations are truly acute, emergent, and unavoidable; however, EMS use is also engaged in the context of persistently unmet chronic needs that culminate in a perceived health crisis. When an unmet health care need is present, the default is often to call EMS. The caller may not necessarily want to go to the ED, but has exhausted their resources.Reference Vetter 18 , Reference Gruneir, Silver and Rochon 19 It is conceivable that in such circumstances resources could be urgently mobilized in the community setting by paramedics, should the context allow.

We will illustrate examples of expanded-scope EMS systems designed to better meet the needs of older adults. These examples often provide alternatives to ED transport, and “bridging” of the acute phase of care back to primary or community-based care. Innovative programs could lead to more efficient, timely, and efficacious care that better aligns with the priorities of older patients, focusing on maintaining function and independence.Reference Fried, Tinetti and Iannone 20

We will also address controversies surrounding the paramedic scope expanding to include such things as frailty assessments, the determination of medical necessity for an ED visit, and the selection of appropriate alternative care pathways. Such expansion may require time away from traditional duties. For instance, would we see prolonged response times for acute/critical cases if paramedics are busy doing frailty assessments? Why are paramedics the best practitioners to assume some of these roles? What educational requirements are needed to ensure paramedics are adequately trained to safely take on these additional responsibilities? We will discuss these controversies, alongside arguments in support of expanding the scope and role of paramedics in geriatric care.

Frailty: Screening and Assessment

Paramedics are easily accessible, and frequently provide care to society’s most vulnerable. In geriatrics, this encompasses those with a high burden of frailty. The extent of patient risk can be better understood by discerning between those who are fit and acutely ill versus frail and acutely ill. Frailty measures have been developed to help clinicians quantify the degree of risk for adverse outcomes and health care needs. Frailty has been described as a “state variable”Reference Rockwood and Mitnitski 21 akin to temperature, and an important health indicator for older adults. Depending on the measure, it may also inform care planning and goal setting. More research is required to understand whether knowing about frailty can lead to improvements in care.Reference Lacas and Rockwood 22

Frailty measures exist despite the lack of a consensus frailty definition. Three definitions are described here. 1) The Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) is simple to use and appealing to clinicians in busy clinical practice; however, it lacks validation in multiple settings and the precision of other measures.Reference Rockwood, Song and MacKnight 23 Clinicians require knowledge about the patient’s comorbidities, mobility, and function in order for it to be used. 2) Frailty has been described as a syndrome or collection of performance-based health problems: slowness, weakness, self-reported decrease in activity, exhaustion, and unintended weight loss.Reference Fried, Tangen and Walston 10 If three of these five problems are present, the person is considered frail. This approach has been well studied, with its main drawback being its difficulty to implement in clinical practice. 3) The Frailty Index (FI) is a count of health problems.Reference Rockwood and Mitnitski 21 Typically, 30-40 variables are considered, with rules guiding their inclusion into the measure. If a person has 10 problems out of a possible 40, for example, their FI would be 0.25. The FI has reproducible mathematical properties, including an upper limit to frailty at 0.7.Reference Rockwood and Mitnitski 21 This limit to frailty has important clinical implications. A FI has been operationalized by counting health deficits from a standard Comprehensive Geriatrics Assessment (FI-CGA).Reference Rockwood and Mitnitski 24 More recently, a FI based on care-partner-reported information (CP-FI-CGA) was derived in the EMS setting.Reference Goldstein, Hubbard and Moorhouse 9 , Reference Goldstein, Travers and Hubbard 25 This approach aimed to minimize the workload for health care practitioners while capturing the information that is vital for frailty determination. The benefits of the FI are in its precision, ability to stratify risk, and inclusion of a variety of age-associated health problems. Its main barrier for use is the need for at least 30 items. Most of the items would be known or easily obtained through a routine assessment, and often include function, mobility, and social factors. Whether the routine assessment of frailty can lead to improvements in care is not known. Frailty screening may aid in determining who might need a more comprehensive in-hospital or community-based assessment following the health crisis. Further, frailty measures can identify someone who is frail and acutely ill compared to someone who is fit and acutely ill. This distinction may be critical when determining treatment options. Often this differentiation is difficult in the ED, where people are removed from their living environment, typically immobile, and dependent on others during their course of care. Paramedics can capture valuable information from brief home, patient, and caregiver assessments/interviews that may help to present a more accurate picture of the patient’s baseline health status. In the absence of a caregiver, this assessment becomes more difficult; however, for the majority of patients, it is still possible.

In our “single problem at a time” approach to care, frail older adults are at risk for under-triage and inadequate care due to the fragmentation of service provision within the health care system.Reference Clarfield, Bergman and Kane 26 Recently, the British Geriatrics Society (BGS) has recommended that all older adults be evaluated for frailty during a health care encounter.Reference Turner and Clegg 27 , 28 This may be a challenging proposition in the EMS/ED context, but paramedics may be ideally positioned to perform this evaluation during the time they would spend with the patient anyway. This would have very little impact on the system in terms of time they are available for traditional scope responsibilities. It could also be argued that this would improve traditional scope care.

Paramedics have also evaluated frailty using the brief CFS, with moderate agreement between paramedics, specialists, and the more comprehensive FI-CGA.Reference Goldstein and Rockwood 29 A FI derived from care-partner-reported information, in the EMS setting, provided comparable predictive discriminatory power for serious adverse events as an in-hospital FI-CGA.Reference Goldstein, Hubbard and Moorhouse 9 These results demonstrate the feasibility of measuring frailty in EMS, and validity in terms of being able to stratify patients by frailty level. Further research is necessary to refine these estimates and to determine the impact on care.

Paramedics could conduct early frailty screening and assessment for both transported and non-transported geriatric patients. This information could then be used to prioritize patients in need of medical evaluation. This information could be passed on to subsequent care providers as a current snapshot measure of health status. The CP-FI-CGA also asks respondents to provide a baseline level of health two weeks prior to the health crisis, providing an estimate of change.Reference Goldstein, Hubbard and Moorhouse 9 EMS has been recognized for its potential role in public health, with research focusing on EMS screening for immunization need,Reference Shah, Lerner and Chiumento 30 falls,Reference Williams, Bachman and Jones 31 and referral to social servicesReference Kue, Ramstrom and Weisberg 32 . Frailty screening could inform decisions regarding transport to emergency care, referral to specialized geriatric services, and other community-based support services such as home care. Improved communication with primary care would allow this valuable information to be shared with care providers.

A more amenable approach to identifying vulnerable older adults may be risk screening in the EMS/ED context. Risk screening has received considerable attention. These tools may be proxy markers of frailty.Reference Goldstein, Andrew and Travers 33 General risk-screening tools have been evaluated in the ED, with the two most commonly studied being the Identification of Seniors at Risk (ISAR)Reference McCusker, Bellavance and Cardin 34 and Triage Risk Screening Tool (TRST)Reference Meldon, Mion and Palmer 35 . The ISAR is a self- or caregiver-completed, six-item measure administered during the ED visit, either upon early presentation or prior to discharge. It includes questions pertaining to premorbid and acute functional dependence, recent hospitalization (within six months), impaired memory, impaired vision, and polypharmacy (taking more than three medications).Reference McCusker, Bellavance and Cardin 34 The TRST evaluates six items, including cognitive impairment, difficulty walking or transferring, recent falls, living alone with no available caregiver, taking five or more prescription medications, ED use in previous 30 days or hospitalization in previous 90 days, and registered nurse (assessor) concern. Two or more risk factors or the presence of cognitive impairment leads to a designation of “high risk.”Reference Meldon, Mion and Palmer 35 One pre-hospital risk screening measure exists,Reference Lee, Verbeek and Morrison 36 but has not been widely evaluated. Paramedics assessing elders at risk of independence loss (PERIL) has been evaluated in three EMS settings.Reference Lee, Verbeek and Kiss 37 Risk screening could minimize under-triage in older adults, identify those at risk for short-term decline upon ED discharge, and identify the need for a more thorough assessment and intervention.Reference McCusker, Verdon and Tousignant 38 Risk/frailty screening represents an opportunity for paramedics to expand their role in the care of older patients. New or enhanced services incorporating this practice should be studied to assess proficiency, patient impact, and the impact on the traditional scope aspects of the system.

Expanding Paramedic Scope and Role: Alternatives to Ed Transport

The accuracy with which paramedics are able to determine “medical necessity” (of an ED visit) is controversial.Reference Carpenter, Shah and Hustey 39 - Reference Brown, Hubble and Cone 42 EMS providers could differentiate between patients who would benefit from acute care in the ED, and those with chronic problems and unmet (or changing) needs that may be better served in the community with expanded assessment skills, guidelines, and medical oversight. Systems endorsing this determination are variable, and patient safety certainly hinges on the robustness of paramedic training, medical oversight, and practice parameters. Some systems have had positive results with programs designed for the care of older adults when additional training is provided for paramedics, and timely follow-up occurs.Reference Jensen, Travers and Bardua 16 , Reference Mason, Knowles and Colwell 40 A randomized controlled trialReference Mason, Knowles and Colwell 40 from the United Kingdom reports positive findings of an expanded scope paramedicine program whereby older adults in the community with minor illness or injury received treatment without transport after calling 999. Paramedics mobilized community resources and arranged follow-up from the scene.

Jensen et al.Reference Jensen, Travers and Bardua 16 describe a Halifax, Nova Scotia–based program whereby expanded scope paramedics respond to select 911 calls at long-term care (LTC) facilities. The paramedic conducts a detailed assessment, speaks with the patient’s family or next-of-kin if necessary, then consults over the phone with both a geriatric care family physician and emergency medicine physician. A care plan is designed, which may include transport to the ED immediately (6% of patients), delayed transport in order to avoid peak times and off-load delays (24% of patients), or a plan is devised such that the patient may remain at the facility where further tests/care/follow-up takes place (70% of patients).Reference Jensen, Travers and Bardua 16 One of the most novel aspects of the program reflects the central role of the paramedic during end-of-life decisions, and their provision of palliative care in the LTC setting. The program often allows patients to receive care according to their overall goals. Appropriate medical oversight and ongoing quality review ensure patient safety.

There are other Canadian illustrations of expanded scope or role systems designed to meet the unique needs of older adults. The EMS system in the County of Renfrew, Ontario services a predominantly rural community, with challenges in terms of access to health and other services. 43 Their “Aging at Home” program identifies individuals who are on the waiting list for a LTC bed, but who could safely remain at home while waiting if some supports were provided. Participants are given a call device which activates a response by a paramedic or personal support worker, as opposed to 911. Paramedics involved in the program receive additional training to prepare them for this role. Early results suggest improved utilization of the health care system. In 129 interactions, 114 (88.4%) did not result in 911 activation, and 86 (66.7%) were fully managed at home.Reference Ruest, Stitchman and Day 44

The Toronto CREMS (Community Referrals by EMS) Program takes advantage of the fact that paramedics may be the first point of contact in the health care continuum. Paramedics identify patients at risk, and make referrals directly to home care services that can be placed within two weeks, with patient consent. If the patient refuses, they are followed up on by a community paramedic. 45 Further evaluation of community paramedic programs is ongoing.Reference Drennan, Dainty and Hoogeveen 46 There is clearly growing interest regarding the safe treatment of ambulance patients in alternative settings as opposed to the ED, and the mobilization of resources to keep patients safe at home.Reference Newton, Tunn and Moses 47 , Reference Munjal and Carr 48 Emerging EMS programs that use expanded scope paramedics with enhanced skill sets and locally adapted protocols will require close scrutiny to ensure patient care is not compromised while alternative care pathways are pursued. Most of the literature documenting the experience of these programs is descriptive in nature. As with any expanded scope initiative, one must consider the costs versus benefits. If the expanded system design engages paramedics during “down time” while on regular duty, traditional scope emergencies, for instance, may suffer from delayed response times. The system expansion may also represent the addition of resources to a traditional EMS system. If this is the case, one must consider whether there is benefit to the patient and health care system overall, in order to justify the additional expense. It is conceivable that these programs represent an added efficiency when the saved expense of avoidable patient ED visits and hospital admissions are considered. Some programs have integrated paramedic pathfinders into the traditional role of EMS.Reference Newton, Tunn and Moses 47 In this model, ground ambulance paramedics use either a medical or trauma pathway to determine whether patients can be provided with self-care advice, referred to primary care, or transported to urgent care or EDs.Reference Newton, Tunn and Moses 47

Geriatrics Education for EMS

The role of EMS in the care of older adults, particularly in the presence of frailty, is changing. Given that paramedics care for older adults frequently, it seems reasonable that they require more knowledge about health problems in this demographic, including common emergency presentations in frail older adults.Reference Turner and Clegg 27 The Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine is highlighting novel programs and knowledge gaps, and serving as a place for geriatric-focused EMS research. There is a critical shortage of geriatrics-prepared health care professionals;Reference Kovner, Mezey and Harrington 49 this includes paramedics. Currently, paramedics receive very little geriatric-specific education in Canada. A similar trend had been noted in the US, which led to the development of the GEMS (Geriatric Education for EMS) Program by the American Geriatrics Society and the National Council of State Emergency Medical Services Training Coordinators (www.gemssite.com).Reference Shah, Rajasekaran and Sheahan 50 , Reference Shah, Swanson and Nobay 51 GEMS is a national continuing education curriculum designed to help pre-hospital providers better care for older adults. Shah et al. (2008) demonstrated improved comfort levels regarding caring for older adults after rural EMS providers attended the GEMS Program.Reference Shah, Rajasekaran and Sheahan 50 Programs that include core principles of geriatric care should be included in pre-hospital provider education, both during their primary education, and during continuing medical education.Reference Shah, Swanson and Nobay 51 , Reference Carpenter and Platts-Mills 52

Expanded scope paramedicine, including more detailed geriatric care, should become part of the National Occupational Competency Profile for paramedic training. This education is required as EMS systems are likely to continue to extend beyond the traditional scope. Paramedics are likely to play a larger role in the detailed assessment and community-based care of older adults. Enhancing the approach to older patients will prepare paramedics to understand the impact of frailty and dementia, as well as inform decisions around medical necessity of an ED visit, determining care paths, collaborating with other care providers, and making appropriate referrals for specialized services. Currently, expanded scope EMS programs often include in-house training for paramedics selected to partake in such programs. There is an opportunity to standardize this training to some extent, for instance, by paramedic schools providing opportunities to earn diplomas or certificates in expanded areas of practice such as geriatrics.

Conclusion

Older adults often require the services of EMS, and many of these patients are frail. Frailty evaluation will help to improve decision-making in the acute care setting, whether the findings inform pre-hospital or subsequent decisions made in the ED. In a fully integrated health care system, EMS providers would also have access to advanced care plans that can be followed at times of a health crisis, so that patients get the type of care they desire in their preferred location when the need arises.

More detailed geriatric assessments are also likely to occur as part of expanded scope EMS systems, sometimes with alternative care paths that don’t include transport to the ED. Paramedic determination of medical necessity, and programs that aim to bring resources to the patient instead of the patient to the ED, often enhance system outcomes (e.g., ED utilization), but such programs will need to be closely examined to ensure the quality and efficiency of patient care are maintained. Finally, paramedics will require additional geriatric-focused education if they are to better care for our aging population. This would apply to all paramedics working in a traditional scope capacity, and even more so to expanded scope paramedics making higher-level decisions for geriatric patients. In the face of a rapidly growing aging population, paramedics are an invaluable part of the health care team and are especially well positioned to help bridge acute and community care.

Competing Interests: None to declare.

References

1. Statistics Canada. Estimates of population, by age group and sex for July 1, Canada, provinces and territories, annual (CANSIM Table 051-0001). Ottawa: Statistics Canada; 2010. Available at: http://www4.hrsdc.gc.ca/[email protected]?iid=33 (accessed June 17, 2014).Google Scholar
2. Svenson, JE. Patterns of use of emergency medical transport: a population based study. Am J Emerg Med 2000;18(2):130-134.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
3. Lowthian, JA, Jolley, DJ, Curtis, AJ, et al. The challenges of population ageing: accelerating demand for emergency ambulances services by older patients, 1995-2015. Med J Aust 2011;194(11):574-578.Google Scholar
4. Shah, MN, Bazarian, JJ, Lerner, EB, et al. The epidemiology of emergency medical services use by older adults: an analysis of the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey. Acad Emerg Med 2007;14(5):441-447.Google Scholar
5. Wofford, JL, Schwartz, E, Byrum, JE. The role of emergency services in health care for the elderly: a review. J Emerg Med 1993;11(3):317-326.Google Scholar
6. Goldstein, J, Jensen, JL, Carter, AJ, et al. Epidemiology of prehospital emergency responses for older adults in a provincial emergency medical services system. CJEM 2013;15(Suppl 1):S72.Google Scholar
7. Hastings, NS, Purser, JL, Johnson, KS, et al. Frailty predicts some but not all adverse outcomes in older adults discharged from the emergency department. J Am Geriatr Soc 2008;56(9):1651-1657.Google Scholar
8. Stiffler, KA, Finley, A, Midha, S, et al. Frailty assessment in the emergency department. J Emerg Med 2013;45(2):291-298.Google Scholar
9. Goldstein, J, Hubbard, RE, Moorhouse, P, et al. The validation of a care partner-derived frailty index based upon comprehensive geriatric assessment (CP-FI-CGA) in emergency medical services and geriatric ambulatory care. Age Ageing 2015;44(2):327-330.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
10. Fried, LP, Tangen, CM, Walston, J, et al. Frailty in older adults: evidence for a phenotype. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 2001;56(3):M146-M156.Google Scholar
11. Mitnitski, AB, Mogilner, AJ, Rockwood, K. Accumulation of deficits as a proxy measure of aging. ScientificWorldJournal 2001;1:323-336.Google Scholar
12. Joseph, B, Pandit, V, Rhee, P, et al. Predicting hospital discharge disposition in geriatric trauma patients: Is frailty the answer? J Trauma Acute Care Surg 2014;76(1):196-200.Google Scholar
13. Bagshaw, SM, Stelfox, HT, McDermid, RC, et al. Association between frailty and short- and long-term outcomes among critically ill patients: a multicentre prospective cohort study. CMAJ 2014;186(2):E95-102.Google Scholar
14. Cooney, DR, Millin, MG, Carter, A, et al. Ambulance diversion and emergency department offload delay: resource document for the National Association of EMS Physicians position statement. Prehosp Emerg Care 2011;15(4):555-561.Google Scholar
15. Martinez, R, Carr, B. Creating integrated networks of emergency care: from vision to value. Health Aff (Millwood) 2013;32(12):2082-2090.Google Scholar
16. Jensen, JL, Travers, AH, Bardua, DJ, et al. Transport outcomes and dispatch determinants in paramedic long-term care program: a pilot study. CJEM 2013;15(4):206-213.Google Scholar
17. Mason, S, Knowles, E, Freeman, J, et al. Safety of paramedics with extended skills. Acad Emerg Med 2008;15(7):607-612.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
18. Vetter, NJ. Effects of an aging population on service use. Rev Clin Geront 2006;15(1):55-62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19. Gruneir, A, Silver, MJ, Rochon, PA. Emergency department use by older adults: a literature review on trends, appropriateness, and consequences of unmet health care needs. Med Care Res Rev 2011;68(2):131-155.Google Scholar
20. Fried, TR, Tinetti, ME, Iannone, L, et al. Health outcome prioritization as a tool for decision making among older persons with multiple chronic conditions. Arch Intern Med 2011;171(20):1854-1856.Google Scholar
21. Rockwood, K, Mitnitski, A. Frailty, fitness, and the mathematics of deficit accumulation. Rev Clin Gerotol 2007;17(1):1-12.Google Scholar
22. Lacas, A, Rockwood, K. Frailty in primary care: a review of its conceptualization and implications for practice. BMC Med 2012;10:4.Google Scholar
23. Rockwood, K, Song, X, MacKnight, C, et al. A global clinical measure of fitness and frailty in elderly people. CMAJ 2005;173(5):489-495.Google Scholar
24. Rockwood, K, Mitnitski, A. Frailty defined by deficit accumulation and geriatric medicine defined by frailty. Clin Geriat Med 2011;27(1):17-26.Google Scholar
25. Goldstein, J, Travers, A, Hubbard, R, et al. Assessment of older adults by emergency medical services: methodology and feasibility of a care partner Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CP-CGA). CJEM 2014;16(5):370-377.Google Scholar
26. Clarfield, AM, Bergman, H, Kane, R. Fragementation of care for frail older people–an international problem. Experience from three countries: Israel, Canada, and the United States. J Am Geriatr Soc 2001;49(12):1714-1721.Google Scholar
27. Turner, G, Clegg, A. Best practice guidelines for the management of frailty: a British Geriatrics Society, Age UK and Royal College of General Practitioners report. Age Ageing 2014;43(6):744-747.Google Scholar
28. Fit for Frailty-consensus best practice guidance for the care of older people living in community and outpatient settings–a report from the British Geriatrics Society 2014. Available at: http://www.bgs.org.uk/campaigns/fff/fff_full.pdf (accessed on May 8, 2014).Google Scholar
29. Goldstein, J, Rockwood, K. Frailty in older pre-hospital patients: properties of a Clincal Frailty Scale [Abstract]. Prehosp Emerg C are 2012;16(1):164.Google Scholar
30. Shah, MN, Lerner, EB, Chiumento, S, et al. An evaluation of paramedic’s ability to screen older adults during emergency responses. Prehosp Emerg Care 2004;8(3):298-303.Google Scholar
31. Williams, JG, Bachman, MW, Jones, AW, et al. Retrospective validation of a protocol to limit unnecessary transport of assisted-living residents who fall. Prehosp Emerg Care 2015;19(1):68-78.Google Scholar
32. Kue, R, Ramstrom, E, Weisberg, S, et al. Evaluation of an emergency medical services-based social services referral program. Prehosp Emerg Care 2009;13(3):273-279.Google Scholar
33. Goldstein, JP, Andrew, MK, Travers, A. Frailty in older adults using pre-hospital care and the emergency department: a narrative review. Can Geriatr J 2012;15(1):16-22.Google Scholar
34. McCusker, J, Bellavance, F, Cardin, S, et al. Detection of older people at increased risk of adverse health outcomes after an emergency visit: the ISAR screening tool. J Am Geriatr Soc 1999;47(10):1229-1237.Google Scholar
35. Meldon, SW, Mion, LC, Palmer, RM, et al. A brief risk-stratification tool to predict repeat emergency department visits and hospitalizations in older patients discharged from the emergency department. Acad Emerg Med 2003;10(3):224-232.Google Scholar
36. Lee, J, Verbeek, R, Morrison, L, et al. Paramedics assessing elders at risk for independence loss (PERIL): feasibility and inter-rater reliability of risk factors for adverse outcomes [abstract]. Acad Emerg Med 2007;14(5):S19.Google Scholar
37. Lee, JS, Verbeek, RP, Kiss, A, et al. Paramedics assessing elders at risk of independence loss (PERIL): nontransportation rates of older clients in 3 EMS systems. CJEM 2009;11(3):263.Google Scholar
38. McCusker, J, Verdon, J, Tousignant, P, et al. Rapid emergency department intervention for older people reduces risk of functional decline: results of a multicenter randomized trial. J Am Geriatr Soc 2001;49(10):1272-1281.Google Scholar
39. Carpenter, CR, Shah, MN, Hustey, FM, et al. High yield research opportunities in geriatric emergency medicine: prehospital care, delirium, adverse drug events, and falls. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 2011;66(7):775-783.Google Scholar
40. Mason, S, Knowles, E, Colwell, B, et al. Effectiveness of paramedic practitioners in attending 999 calls from elderly people in the community: cluster randomised controlled trial. BMJ 2007;335(7626):919.Google Scholar
41. Bigham, BL, Kennedy, SM, Drennan, I, et al. Expanding paramedic scope of practice in the community: a systematic review of the literature. Prehosp Emerg Care 2013;17(3):361-372.Google Scholar
42. Brown, LH, Hubble, MW, Cone, DC, et al. Paramedic determiniations of medical necessity: a meta-analysis. Prehosp Emerg Care 2009;13(4):516-527.Google Scholar
43. County of Renfrew Paramedic Service. Aging at Home. Community Paramedic; 2011. Available at: http://www.communityparamedic.ca/pages/home/aging-at-home.php (accessed January 13, 2015).Google Scholar
44. Ruest, M, Stitchman, A, Day, C. Evaluating the impact on 911 calls by an in-home programme with a multidisciplinary team. Int Paramedic Prac 2012;1(4):125-132.Google Scholar
45. Toronto Emergency Medical Services. Community Paramedicine. Available at: http://www.torontoems.ca/main-site/service/community-paramedicine.html (accessed January 13, 2015).Google Scholar
46. Drennan, IR, Dainty, KN, Hoogeveen, P, et al. Expanding Paramedicine in the Community (EPIC): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. Trials 2014;15:473.Google Scholar
47. Newton, M, Tunn, E, Moses, I, et al. Clinical navigation for beginners: the clinical utility and safety of the Paramedic Pathfinder. Emerg Med J 2014;31(e1):e29-e34.Google Scholar
48. Munjal, K, Carr, B. Realigning reimbursement policy and financial incentives to support patient-centered out-of-hospital care. JAMA 2013;309(7):667-668.Google Scholar
49. Kovner, CT, Mezey, M, Harrington, C. Who cares for older adults? Workforce implications of an aging society. Health Aff (Millwood) 2002;21(5):78-89.Google Scholar
50. Shah, MN, Rajasekaran, K, Sheahan, WD, et al. The impact of the geriatrics education for emergency medical services training program in a rural community. J Am Geriatr Soc 2008;56(6):1134-1139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
51. Shah, MN, Swanson, PA, Nobay, F, et al. A novel internet-based geriatric education program for emergency medical service providers. J Am Geriatr Soc 2012;60(9):1749-1754.Google Scholar
52. Carpenter, CR, Platts-Mills, T. Evolving prehospital, emergency department, and “inpatient” management models for geriatric emergencies. Clin Geriatr Med 2013;29(1):31-47.Google Scholar