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From Research to Practice
Monday, August 27, 2007
(Charlene Quinn, RN, PhD) --
Welcome to the Horizon Foundation web column,
Health and Aging: Research to Community and
Practice. This series will present
research findings which will assist those in
the community—nurses, physicians, social
workers, families, older adults themselves
–to redefine our perceptions of aging and
health.
Headlines remind us that we are
seeing a demographic shift in our society, with
profound implications for health and benefit
programs. Each day more than 7900
Americans turn age 60. By 2030, one-fifth
of Americans will be over the age of 65.
Fortunately, over the past
century, both the life expectancy and the
health of Americans of all ages have improved
dramatically. The increase in life
expectancy, however, has increased the
prevalence of chronic health conditions,
including high blood pressure, diabetes,
Alzheimer’s disease and other cognitive
impairments. Chronic conditions limit the daily
activities of 34 percent of older adults (CDC).
Delaying disease progression and
treating or managing these chronic conditions
is critical. Fortunately, we are seeing a
transformational change in how health and
medical research findings are adapted in
communities. Translation Research includes
application of discoveries in the laboratory to
studies in humans (for example genetics or drug
studies) and research aimed at enhancing the
adoption of best practices in the community.
Cost-effectiveness of prevention and treatment
strategies is also an important part of
translational science.
The Horizon
Foundation and the Howard County Office on
Aging recently sponsored the Maryland Health
and Aging Summit. The Summit provided a forum
for translational science for several Maryland
academic institutions and nationally recognized
researchers in the study of aging. Click
here for more information on the Summit and
links to the presentations.
Dr.
Linda Fried, Director of Geriatric Medicine and
the Center on Aging and Health at the Johns
Hopkins Medical Institutions spoke about both
the heterogeneity and the complexity of health
care for older adults. Based on what we know
about aging and health, Dr. Fried recommends a
health care system that provides coordinated
care for persons across transitions (i.e.
discharge from hospital to home), regional
electronic medical records, geriatric health
care physicians and health teams targeting
frail elderly, geriatric competency training
for all primary care physicians, and
integration of community based services with
health care.
Dr. Rich Macko, Professor
at the University of Maryland School of
Medicine & Baltimore Veterans
Administration Medical Center and Director,
Maryland Exercise & Robotics Center of
Excellence (MERCE), described his studies of
task-oriented exercise (e.g. treadmill walking
with cane) following stroke.
Approximately 750,000 strokes occur each year.
This number is expected to double by 2040 with
a cumulative cost of $2.2 trillion by 2050
(Annals of Neurology, 2006). Current treatment
guidelines focus on rehabilitation in the first
few months following the stroke, but do not
include recommendations to promote exercise
when the patient returns to community settings,
despite the fact that about 75% of older stroke
patients experience persistent deficits.
Studies conducted in Dr.
Macko’s exercise and robotics lab and
collaborative work in Italy have shown
considerable promise. Task oriented and aerobic
exercise improved socialization, fitness,
insulin and glucose metabolism, gait balance
and walking, even years post-stroke. Dr
Macko’s team will conduct new research in
Howard County senior centers, Maryland Health
Enterprises facilities and several sites in
Baltimore County hoping to replicate the
previous results.
Dr. Kostas Lyketsos,
Professor and Chair, Department of Psychiatry,
Johns Hopkins Bayview presented results of
studies of dementia. Based on the
Maryland Assisted Living Facilities (ALFs)
studies, Johns Hopkins researchers determined
about one third of person 85 years and older
have dementia, and 30 percent of dementia cases
among AFL residents weren’t detected.
The MD-ALF study also showed that the presence
of dementia accelerates discharge from assisted
living to higher levels of care.
The
researchers found that treatment of dementia
may attenuate this effect. There is also a
suggestion that activity participation and
improved mobility might delay discharge of
residents with dementia. These findings suggest
that detection and treatment of dementia may
make a real difference for AL residents (JAGS,
2007).
These findings led to
development of the MIND@HOME Demonstration
Project, scheduled to launch in early
2008. The study will focus on improving
the care and outcomes for Baltimore City elders
with memory loss who are living in their own
home. Using existing community resources,
MIND@HOME will test the effectiveness of a
broadly-based dementia detection method and a
proactive, care coordination model, guided by
the principles of dementia care. Dr.
Lyketsos referred to the “5-50
hypothesis”—through early detection and
treatment he hypothesized we can obtain a 5
year delay in dementia that leads to
dysfunction and a 50% reduction in dementia
cases.
Another panel of presenters
at the Summit explored the role of technology
in promoting the health and independence of
older adults. Older adults and their families
are finding new uses for technology, including
“smart homes”, health monitors which can
relay vital information (blood pressure,
weight, daily blood glucoses) directly to
health care providers, and robotic assistance
for frail older adults.
Clearly, many
of the research discussions at the Summit on
Health and Aging are models for translating
research to practical use in the community.