Leveraging VA geriatric emergency department accreditation to improve elder abuse detection in older Veterans using a standardized tool.

TitleLeveraging VA geriatric emergency department accreditation to improve elder abuse detection in older Veterans using a standardized tool.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsMakaroun LK, Halaszynski JJ, Rosen T, Haggerty KLees, Blatnik JK, Froberg R, Elman A, Geary CA, Hagy DM, Rodriguez C, McQuown CM
JournalAcad Emerg Med
Volume30
Issue4
Pagination428-436
Date Published2023 Apr
ISSN1553-2712
KeywordsAged, Elder Abuse, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Military Personnel, United States, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans
Abstract

Elder abuse (EA) is common and has devastating health impacts, yet most cases go undetected limiting opportunities to intervene. Older Veterans receiving care in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) represent a high-risk population for EA. VHA emergency department (ED) visits provide a unique opportunity to identify EA, as assessment for acute injury or illness may be the only time isolated older Veterans leave their home, but most VHA EDs do not have standardized EA assessment protocols. To address this, we assembled an interdisciplinary team of VHA social workers, physicians, nurses, intermediate care technicians (ICTs; former military medics and corpsmen who often conduct screenings in VHA EDs) and both VHA and non-VHA EA subject matter experts to adapt the Elder Mistreatment Screening and Response Tool (EM-SART) to pilot in the Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center geriatric ED (GED) program. The cornerstone of their approach is an interdisciplinary GED consultation led by ICTs and nurses who screen high-risk older Veterans for geriatric syndromes and unmet needs. The adapted EM-SART was integrated into the electronic health record and GED workflow in December 2020. By July 2022, a total of 251 Veterans were screened with nine (3.6%) positive on the prescreen and five (2%) positive on the comprehensive screen. Based on the first-year pilot experience, the interdisciplinary team was expanded and convened regularly to further adapt the EM-SART for wider use in VHA, including embedding flexibility for both licensed and nonlicensed clinicians to complete the screening tool and tailoring response options to be specific to VHA policy and resources. The national momentum for VHA EDs to improve care for older Veterans and secure GED accreditation offers unique opportunities to embed this evidence-based approach to EA assessment in the largest integrated health system in the United States.

DOI10.1111/acem.14646
Alternate JournalAcad Emerg Med
PubMed ID36575600
PubMed Central IDPMC10192131
Grant ListIK2 HX003330 / HX / HSRD VA / United States

Mailing Address
New York-Presbyterian Hospital
Weill Cornell Medical Center
Department of Emergency Medicine
525 E. 68th St., Box 179
New York, NY 10065

Office of the Chair
Emergency Medicine
525 E. 68th St., M-130
New York, NY 10065
(212) 746-0780

Residency Offices
Physician Residency
530 E. 70th St., M-127

New York, NY 10021
May2004@med.cornell.edu
(212) 746-0892

Physician Assistant
empa_residency@med.cornell.edu

Nurse Practitioner
ldm4001@med.cornell.edu

Research Office
525 E. 68th St., M-130
New York, NY 10065
EMResearch@med.cornell.edu

Leading Emergency Care