Abstract

The scenario is a familiar one. A nurse from the skilled nursing facility calls you because one of your patients is not doing well. “Should I send her to the hospital?” Although hospitalization offers acute services and onsite specialists, physicians can manage a wide range of medical problems in the nursing home. Additionally, nurses at such facilities are able to provide a variety of services from intravenous hydration and medications to wound management and palliative care. The decision to send a patient to the hospital is multifactorial, and influences include the severity of the underlying medical problem, availability of nursing home services, physician comfort level, patient and family request, and economic incentives. 1a Kayser-Jones JS Wiener CL Barbaccia JC Factors contributing to the hospitalization of nursing home residents. Gerontologist. 1989; 29: 502-510 Crossref PubMed Scopus (154) Google Scholar Hospitalization is not without its own set of risks and benefits. Hospitalized older patients are at an increased risk for adverse events including delirium, functional decline, and iatrogenesis, and their overall health and quality of life may be deleteriously affected by such experiences.

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