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L Zioupos1; J Kirkpatrick1; A Anand2
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Introduction Approximately one-third of older patients leave hospital with a new functional impairment. Tracking rehabilitation progress following acute illness could improve recognition and understanding of hospital-acquired disability. However, traditional mobility and functional scores include measures that are not part of routine rehabilitation therapy, adding a time burden for staff to report. Capturing data already recorded in routine electronic records could provide an efficient patient tracking measure of rehabilitation success. Methods A scoping literature review appraised existing

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N Ma1; S Low1; S Hasan2; A Lawal2; S Patel3; K Nurse4; G McNaughton4; R Aggarwal4; J Evans5; R Koria5; C Lam11; M Chakravorty1; G Stanley2; S Banna1; T Kalsi1,4
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Introduction Care home residents can have variable access to eye care services & treatments. We developed a collaborative approach between optometrists, care homes, and primary & secondary care to enable personalised patient-centred care. Objective To develop and evaluate an integrated model of eye care for care home residents. Methods Small scale plan-do-study-act (PDSA) service tests were completed in three care-homes in Southwark (2 residential, 1 nursing) between November 2021 to May 2022. Processes were compared to historical feedback & hospital-based ophthalmology clinic attendances (Mar

Authors' names
N Ma1; S Low1; S Hasan2; S Banna1; S Patel3; T Kalsi1,4
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Introduction The prevalence of eye disease and visual impairment in care home residents is disproportionately higher compared to the general population. Access to eye care services and treatment can be variable for this vulnerable population. Objective This narrative synthesis reviews the available evidence of services and interventions for delivering eye care to care home residents. The key review questions: 1. What is the existing evidence for eye care interventions or services (including service configuration) for care home residents? 2. Does the provision of these interventions or services

Authors' names
G Shah 1, I Nehikhare 1 , N Obiechina 1, A Michael 2, A Gill 1 , P Carey 1, R Khan 1 , M Slavica 1, T Khan 1, S Rahman 1, W Mushtaq 1, H Brar 1, S Senthilselvan 1, M Mukherjee 1, A Nandi 1
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Introduction: Co-morbidities and frailty are common in older heart failure patients. The aim of this study is to explore the relationship between co-morbidity, frailty and ejection fraction (EF) in older heart failure inpatients. Methods: A cross-sectional, observational, retrospective analysis of consecutive patients aged 60 years and over who were admitted with heart failure in a UK hospital. Patients with incomplete data were excluded. Carlson’s comorbidity index (CCI) was used to compute comorbidity, and the Rockwood Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) was used to measure frailty. The EF was

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Authors' names
C Manietta1,2; D Purwins1,2; A Reinhard1; C Pinkert1,2; L Fink2,4; M Feige5; C Knecht2,3 and M Roes1,2
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Introduction: Dementia-friendly hospitals (DFH) are mentioned as one of several key initiatives in national dementia strategies. In our previous integrative review, we identified 17 descriptions of DFHs and analysed six characteristics of DFH: continuity, person-centredness, consideration of phenomena within dementia, environment, valuing relatives and knowledge and expertise within the hospital (Manietta et al., BMC Geriatrics, 2022, 22, 468, 1-16). We also learned that the term DFH is based more on healthcare practice than research. To address this research gap, one step of our

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Authors' names
M Rommerskirch-Manietta1,2; D Purwins1,2; K Van Haitsma3; K Abbott4,5; M Roes1,2
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Introduction: Community-based care such as adult day services (ADS) are preferred by people with dementia. ADS offers the opportunity to support the health and social needs of their clients and provide respite to family members, contributing to a stable care situation at home. The psychological needs of humans according to the self-determination-theory (SDT) (autonomy, competence, and relatedness) can be fulfilled by leisure activities and thus improve well-being and quality of life. The implementation of leisure activities that reflect individual preferences support active participation

Authors' names
N Obiechina 1, A Michael 2, A Gill 1 , P Carey 1, G Shah 1, I Nehikhare 1, R Khan 1 , M Slavica 1, T Khan 1, S Rahman 1, W Mushtaq 1, H Brar 1, S Senthilselvan 1, M Mukherjee 1, A Nandi 1
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Introduction Both frailty and HF are common in the elderly population. Elderly HF patients have an increased risk of frailty, and frail elderly patients are at a higher risk of developing HF. Frailty is an independent predictor of mortality in cardiovascular disease. Sarcopenia(defined as decreased muscle mass and muscle strength and/or performance)is also prevalent in HF patients and may progress to cardiac cachexia. HF may induce sarcopenia, and sarcopenia may contribute to the poor prognosis of HF. Aims: To assess the prevalence of frailty in older HF inpatients • To determine the risk of

Authors' names
Yu-Han Hsiao1,2,3, Meng-Chih Lee2,3 and Shiuan-Shinn Lee 1
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Introduction: It has been considered that widowed persons have a higher risk of death. This study intends to explore whether social participation can improve this trend. Methods: A longitudinal study database was conducted to explore the trend of survival and its change with social participation in the widowed persons. The Taiwan Longitudinal Study on Aging (TLSA), based on four consecutive waves of longitudinal follow-up data in 1999, 2003, 2007 and 2011 was linked with the National Death Registry from 1999 through 2012. Results: Totally, there were 1,417 widowed persons and 4,500 non-widowed

Authors' names
Hannah Griffin (1), Jennie Wilson (1), Alison Tingle (1), Anke Görzig (2) and Heather Loveday (1)
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Aim Dysphagia affects up to 70% of nursing home residents and incorrect management can result in choking and aspiration pneumonia. (SLT). This study aimed to understand the mealtime experience of residents with dysphagia, how this compared with best practice for preventing aspiration pneumonia and what factors influenced their care. Methods: Mealtime care of residents with dysphagia from 2 care homes was observed using structured tool to capture 12 elements of expected practice related to safe nutrition/hydration care and compare observed practice with recommendations in Speech and language

Authors' names
Alma Au
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Introduction: With the unprecedented population growth of older adults worldwide, higher life-expectancies are creating increasingly more multigenerational interaction. Funded by the General Research Fund of the Research Grant Council in Hong Kong, the study examined the effects of telephone-administered perspective-taking intervention in the context of intergenerational caregiving. The data was collected from 2019 to 2021 in Hong Kong. Method: Through a cluster-randomized trial, one-hundred seventy-six adult child caregivers of persons living with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) were randomized into

Authors' names
T Caprioli 1, 2; S Maceo 3; H Tetlow 1; S Reilly 4; C Giebel 1,2
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Introduction: Post-diagnostic support is key to ensuring the well-being of people with dementia and unpaid carers. The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a shift from in-person to remote service delivery, often with the use of information communication technologies (ICT) formats. This systematic review examined how ICT has been used to access remote post-diagnostic support services that address the needs people with dementia, or those of dyad, and explored care recipients’ views on accessing dementia-related support remotely. Method: Concepts relating to dementia and ICT were searched across six

Authors' names
B Sharma1; A Roy1; MC Sharma2; J Banerjee3; RK Netam1; TC Nag4; N Akhtar1; HN Mallick5
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Introduction: Poor muscle health is associated with a series of chronic and metabolic conditions that are prevalent in individuals who chronically experience poor-quality sleep. But there is no study deciphering the role of sleep deprivation on muscle ageing. Therefore, in the present study we have measured the ultrastructure, histopathology, and oxidative stressors in soleus muscle of wistar rat after sleep deprivation and recovery sleep. Material and Methods: The experiments were conducted in18 rats of three groups. Group I rats had normal sleep wake cycle, Group II rats were subjected to 24

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Authors' names
M Conneely1; S Leahy2; D Trépel3, K Robinson1, F Boland4, F Moriarty5, R Galvin1
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Introduction: Acute healthcare use varies by age, with older adults the highest users of most acute healthcare services. International reports have highlighted increased use of Emergency Department (ED) services by older adults . Older adults who visit the ED may be admitted to hospital or discharged home and are vulnerable to adverse outcomes including cognitive decline, falls, readmission, mortality and hospital acquired limitations in activities of daily living. Using data from The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA), the aim of this study was to investigate the impact of acute

Authors' names
E Mensah1; K Ali1,2; W Banya3; F Kirkham1; M Mengozzi2; P Ghezzi4; C Rajkumar1,2*
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Introduction There is an association between frailty and arterial stiffness. However, arterial stiffness does not uniformly correlate with the spectrum of frailty states. Both oxidative stress and inflammaging contribute to vascular aging. There are no human studies exploring links between arterial stiffness, oxidative stress, inflammaging and frailty. Our objective is to investigate arterial stiffness and inflammaging as predictors of frailty states. Methods An observational longitudinal cohort study will be used to examine the association between arterial stiffness, oxidative stress, and

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Authors' names
C R E D Smith1; S Aziz1; S V Duper1
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Introduction: Dehydration is a major contributing factor to morbidity and mortality in elderly patients, as they are at greater risk and more vulnerable to the consequences of inadequate fluid intake. Care of the Elderly (COE) wards are set up to meet the specific care needs of elderly patients, however, these care needs are not consistently met on medical outlier wards at NUH. This project aimed to improve hydration-related patient care on outlier wards using a sustainable intervention by increasing average daily fluid intake (ADFI) by 50% and patients with drinks within an arm's reach by 50%

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Authors' names
C Halevy; F Stephen; N Lochrie; C Jennings
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Introduction: The Trauma Audit and Research Network report “Major Trauma in Older People” highlighted the need to recognise falls in older patients as a mechanism leading to potentially life-threatening injuries. Reasons behind falls can be equally serious and must be addressed concurrently. A Frail Trauma Pathway was introduced in the Emergency Department (ED) of a Major Trauma Centre (MTC) and subsequent audit revealed it was underutilised. We relaunched the Frail Trauma Pathway incorporating a checklist with the aim of improving patient care. Method: Retrospective data was collected over

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Authors' names
Dr Alice Luesley, Mr Sangram Patil, Mr Ankit Agrawal, Mr Ahamad Masri
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A National Confidential Enquiry of Patient Outcome and Death (NCEPOD) report ‘An Age Old Problem’ in 2010 highlighted the failure of the NHS in providing good quality clinical care for elderly patients undergoing surgery. This report generated important guidelines aimed at improving the perioperative care of elderly patients. NCEPOD standards state 95% of elderly patients receiving a geriatric review as part of their perioperative care. A closed loop audit with two completed cycles in 2018 and 2021 and an ongoing cycle in 2022 looks at the compliance of Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

Authors' names
K C Wee1; D Alicehajic-Becic1
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INTRODUCTION The aim of this quality improvement project was to assess the medical discharge letters written by medical colleagues at this trust against the guidelines set by the Royal College of Physicians. The target was to achieve at least 90% compliance across the components evaluated at the end of this project. METHOD This quality improvement project evaluated medical discharge letters from three medical wards. Following the application of filtering criteria, a sample size of approximately 20 patients was randomly selected for data collection. Sections that were evaluated in the discharge

Authors' names
P SAWNEY 1; H REHMAN 1; S ALI 1; D ALICEHAJIC-BECIC 1; E CLARKE 1; K KHAN 1; K ROUGHNEEN 2; E LEIGH 3
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Introduction: NICE guidance recommends that doctors need to identify patients who are approaching their final year of life, through the utilisation of tools such as the Clinical Frailty Score (CFS). The 'Getting it right first time' (GIRFT) document recommended that all local health systems identify older people in the last phase of life and offer them Advanced Care Planning (ACP). Wigan has a large population of frail patients who would benefit from ACP discussions. Aim: Initiate a strategy for identifying patients with severe frailty and establish a process for implementing ACP. Method

Authors' names
A Seeley1; M Glogowska 2; G Hayward 3
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Introduction In 2017 NHS England introduced proactive identification of frailty into the General Practitioners (GPs) Contract. There is currently little information as to how this policy has been operationalised by front-line clinicians, their working understanding of frailty, or perceptions of impact on patient care. Evidence from international settings suggests primary care clinicians may have mixed interpretations of frailty, with important implications for their willingness to support different frailty interventions. We aimed to explore the conceptualisation of frailty, and how community