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Evidence-Based Prevention Improves Chronic Care Management . Nancy A. Whitelaw, Ph.D. Director, Center for Healthy Aging The National Council on the Aging www.ncoa.org February, 2005. As of February 4, approximately 160,172 people have died from chronic disease this year.
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Evidence-Based Prevention Improves Chronic Care Management Nancy A. Whitelaw, Ph.D. Director, Center for Healthy Aging The National Council on the Aging www.ncoa.org February, 2005
As of February 4, approximately 160,172 people have died from chronic disease this year. 1993 vs. 2001: US adults reported: Deterioration in: • physical health • mental health • ability to do their usual activities Increase in “unhealthy days” • 5.2 to 6.0 days Adults 45-54 years old had consistently greater deterioration than younger or older adults.
“Honest doc--if I had known I was gonna to live this long, I’d have taken better care of myself.”
Center for Healthy Aging • Increase the quality and accessibility of health programming at community agencies serving older adults • National Resource Center on Evidence-based Prevention • Evidence-based Model Health Programs • Falls Free: National Falls Prevention Action Plan • Moving Out: Best Practices in Physical Activity • MD Link: Connecting Physicians to Model Health Programs • New Connections: Partnerships between PH and Aging • Get Connected: Partnerships between MH and Aging
Overview • What are the real threats to health and function of older adults? • How should these threats be addressed? • How do we strengthen community resources and self-management support for prevention?
Health Status of Older Adults • 88% - at least one chronic condition • 50% - at least two chronic conditions • 37% experience some activity limitation • 27% assess health as fair or poor • 42% of older African Americans • 35% of older Hispanics
Chronic Conditions Among Persons 70+ Chronic diseases account for 95% of health care expenditures
Leading Causes of Death, Age 65+ (2001) • Heart Disease 32% • Cancer 22% • Stroke 8% • Chronic respiratory 6% • Flu/Pneumonia 3% • Diabetes 3% • Alzheimer’s 3%
Underlying Risk Factors – “The Actual Causes of Death” Behavior% of deaths, 2000 • Smoking 18% • Poor diet & nutrition/ 15% Physical inactivity • Alcohol 4% • Infections, pneumonia 3% • Racial, ethnic, economic ? disparities
Threats to Health and Well-being Among Seniors • 35% age 65 – 74 report no physical activity • 46% age 75+ report no physical activity • 24% - obese • 33% - fall each year • 20% - prescribed “unsuitable” medications • 34% - no flu shot • 45% - no pneumococcal vaccine
Low Rates of Physical Inactivity • Older adults with low-socioeconomic status are at even greater risk of inactivity • No physical activity age 75+ • 33% of males • 50% of females
Obesity* Trends Among U.S. AdultsBRFSS, 2001(*BMI 30, or ~ 30 lbs overweight for 5’4” woman) (Marx) <10% 10%–14% 15%–19% 20%-24% 25% Source: Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, CDC.
Disability Increases with Age BUT Much Higher Rates Among the Obese* (Marx) 1,200 Obese Non-Obese 900 per 10,000 people 600 300 0 60-69 50-59 40-49 30-39 18-29 Age Group *Data based on 1996 National Health Interview Survey Sources: National Business Group on Health; Rand Corp.
Severe Obesity and Mortality • Severe obesity (BMI >45) lowers years of life by 13 years for white men and 8 years for white women age 20–30. • For blacks the loss was 20 years for men and 5 years for women. Fontaine et al. JAMA 2003;289:187–193
Total Cardiovascular Disease Deaths, 1999Age-adjusted death rates per 100,000 population (Marx) 190.5–230.8 231.1–250.0 255.5–284.8 285.1–354.9 United States - 172 Source: National Vital Statistics System, National Center for Health Statistics, CDC
Variation in Heart Disease Rates, Why? (Marx) • 200% difference between high and low states • Nearly 2/3 of the difference in death rates is explained by differences in modifiable risks • tobacco • overweight • high blood pressure • high cholesterol • physical inactivity • diabetes Source: Byers et al. Prev Med 1998;27(3):311–16
High Rates of Diabetes • 17 Million Americans • 6% of population • 18% of 65+ • Greater in minority populations • Diabetes diagnosed at age 40 leads to a loss of 11.6 years in men and 14.3 years in women. More years of life are lost in blacks than in whites. Narayan et al. JAMA 2003;290:1884–1890
Predicted Likelihood of Developing Coronary Heart Disease, Stroke, or Diabetes by Age 65 (Marx) Men, Aged 50 Non Smoker Normal Weight Active Smoker Overweight Inactive Ratio 11% 58% 5.5 Source: Jones et al. Arch Intern Med 2002;162:2565–71
Disability Index,by Age and Health Risk University of Pennsylvania Alumni 0.30 0.25 0.20 High risk Disability Index 0.15 Moderate risk 0.10 Low risk 0.05 0.00 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 Age Progression of disability delayed approximately 7 years in low risk vs. high risk. Risk based on body mass index, smoking, exercise; 0-3 point scale for each; low = 0–2 points, moderate = 3–4 points, high = 5–9 points. Note: A disability index of 0.1 = minimal disability. Source: Vita et al. N Engl J Med 1998;338(15):1035–41
Serious Consequences of Falls • Falls are common • 30% age 65+ years • 50% age 80+ years • As a result of a fall injury: • 1.6 million were treated in EDs • 400,000 were hospitalized • 11,600 died • At age 75+, those who fall are 4-5 times more likely to stay in a long term care facility >1 year • Falls cost > $15 billion/year
Falls Are Predictable (RF= Risk Factor) % who fall
Risk Factors • strength, balance/ gait • vision, postural BP • Depression, arthritis • Foot problems • Medications • Environmental hazards • Fear of falling
Negative Effects of Depression • 15-20% of older adults - clinically significant depression • Major depression prevalence: • Primary care (5-10%) • Home care (15% - 26%) • Late-life depression associated with: • Functional impairment, lower quality of life, poorer medical outcomes, increased costs and suicide
Serious Consequences of Medication Errors • Seniors consume 1/3 of all prescription drugs • 33 inappropriate prescription drugs • 6.5 million older adults use one or more • 7,000 deaths per year due to adverse drug events • 5th leading cause of death for older adults • The annual cost of treating medication-related errors exceeds $177 billion/year Institute of Medicine. (1999) To err is human: Building a safer health system. Kohn, L., Corrigan, J., Donaldson, M. (Eds.) National Academy Press, Washington D.C.
How Should these Threats be Addressed? “No longer is each risk factor and chronic illness being considered in isolation. Awareness is increasing that similar strategies can be equally effective in treating many different conditions.” Epping-Jordon, WHO, 26 March 2004
Chronic Care Model Community Health System Health Care Organization Resources and Policies ClinicalInformationSystems Self-Management Support DeliverySystem Design Decision Support Prepared, Proactive Practice Team Informed, Activated Patient Productive Interactions Outcomes Improved Outcomes
Public Policy Community Organizational Interpersonal Individual Social Ecologic Model of Healthy Aging McLeroy et al., 1988, Health Educ Q; Sallis et al., 1998, Am J Prev Med
What the Social-Ecological Perspective Says • The health and well-being of older adults will be improved only if we work from a broad perspective. • Comprehensive planning and partnerships at all levels are required. • Harassing individuals about their bad habits has very little impact. • Changes at the individual level will come with improvements at the organizational, community and policy levels.
Community Resources, Why? • Ensure that care is centered on older adult and family • Support self management and behavior change • Provide critical prevention programming: physical activity; falls prevention; dietary modification • Provide key supportive services • Facilitate care coordination • Outreach, information and referral
Self-Management Support, What? • Emphasize the patient’s central role in managing her/his health • Use effective self-management support strategies • assessment, goal-setting, action planning, problem solving and follow-up • peer support groups; peer health mentors • Include physical activity • More intensive problem-solving therapy if depressed.
How Do We Strengthen Community Resources and Self- Management Support for Prevention? • Old question: Does what we are doing work? • New question: Can we do what is known to work? • What do we know works? • How well do we know it and understand it? • About whom do we know it?
AoA Initiative - Evidence-Based Programs • Disease self-management (5) • Diabetes • Heart disease • Depression • Chronic Disease Self-Management Program (2) • Physical activity (3) • Falls prevention (2) • Nutrition (2) • Medication management (1)
Doing What Works • Evidence of problem: The burden is great. • Evidence of effective interventions: The science is convincing. • Core features of an effective program: Fidelity is possible. • Requirements for successful implementation • Reach • Effectiveness • Adoption • Implementation • Maintenance
Partners and Planning – (P)RE-AIM • Find your partners - aging, health, research • Identify and review evidence of health conditions and risk factors for older adults in the community • Surveillance data • Other surveys • Review scientific evidence on proven, effective interventions or models • Identify core components of effective programs • Which specific program components contributed to the positive results?
Partners and Planning – (P)RE-AIM • Select interventions/models • Appropriate for targeted conditions or risk factors • Suitable for targeted populations and locations • Feasible to implement – can preserve core components • Suitable for adoption by a variety of agencies, staff with different skills • Communicate – to community leaders, media, older adults, other stakeholders
Detail the Translation: Developing “Your” Program • Detail the following: (RE-AIM) • Reach; Effectiveness • Adoption; Implementation; Maintenance • Fidelity A: The program you develop retains the core components from the original intervention studies. • Tracking Changes Tool • Fidelity B: The program you implement retains the core components from the developed program.
Reach and Retention - People • The number, proportion, and representativeness of individuals who participate in a given program. • Key questions: • How many people are in the target population? • How do I reach and retain these high risk, diverse older adults? • What percent of the target population actually learns about the program? • Are those who become “enrolled” the ones who have the most to gain? • Do participants truly reflect the targeted population?
Adoption - Organizations • The number, proportion, and representativeness of settings and staff who are willing to offer the program. • Key questions: • How many organizations could implement this program? “Readiness” • Are these organizations connected to high risk populations? • How many of these organizations will actually operate the program? • What will motivate these organizations to participate?
Implementation - Organizations • How closely do the agency and staff follow the program that was developed. This includes “fidelity” of delivery and the time and cost of the program. • Key questions: • How many staff within a setting will try this? • Does training and supervision support implementation? • Do data systems support implementation? • Do work flow processes support implementation? • Do policies and procedures support implementation?
Maintenance – People and Organizations • The extent to which a program or policy becomes part of the routine organizational practices and policies. • At the individual level, the long-term effects of a program on outcomes (perhaps 6 or more months). • Key questions: • Can organizations sustain the program over time? • Does the program produce lasting effects at individual level? • Are those persons and settings that show maintenance those most in need?