Latest News

Adding Life to Your Patients’ Years


 

Stress Management

Exploring stress with patients can be very revealing. Do they experience stress that energizes and has a positive effect? How much of their day is spent in negatively impactful distress? Chronic stress has been shown to affect immune function in older individuals. Start conversations with your older patients to normalize the importance of stress as a health measure.

Positive Social Connections

Loneliness puts individuals at higher risk for heart disease, stroke, and dementia and even increases the risk for premature death by up to 60%. Yet, clinicians and patients rarely discuss social connections during medical appointments. Tools such as the UCLA Loneliness Scale exist for health practitioners to assess and identify patients at risk for loneliness, as do resources to integrate social care into the delivery of healthcare.

Avoidance of Risky Substances

Alcohol assessments are not just for younger patients. One study found that 5.6 million adults ages 65 or older engaged in binge drinking in the past month. Because of body changes, the negative effects of alcohol may be greater on older adults, including interactions between alcohol and commonly prescribed medications.

Conducting a lifestyle assessment is an important way to engage with older patients and allows clinicians to identify opportunities to improve health behaviors, understand obstacles, and support patients to make lifestyle changes. It may uncover ways to remove some of the pill and treatment burdens that older adults often experience. The American College of Lifestyle Medicine (ACLM) offers clinical practice resources to support clinicians as well as “Lifestyle Medicine and Food as Medicine Essentials,” a 5.5-hour complimentary CE/CME course on food and lifestyle medicine that introduces clinicians to the therapeutic use of lifestyle medicine. ACLM also offers members interest groups focused on geriatrics, fitness, and mental health, which may be beneficial to clinicians treating older adults.

By engaging with older patients on their lifestyle behaviors, we can ensure that we are doing all we can to help them live longer — and live better.

Dr. Collings is director of lifestyle medicine, Silicon Valley Medical Development, and past president, American College of Lifestyle Medicine, Mountain View, California. She has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Practicing Medicine in Canada’s Far North
MDedge Internal Medicine
Statins Tied to Lower Mortality, Even With Comorbid Dementia
MDedge Internal Medicine
This Could Be Key to Motivating Older Patients to Exercise
MDedge Internal Medicine
A Prescription Checklist for Older Adults in ED
MDedge Internal Medicine
Higher BMI More CVD Protective in Older Adults With T2D?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Hormone Therapy After 65 a Good Option for Most Women
MDedge Internal Medicine
Salt Substitutes May Cut All-Cause And Cardiovascular Mortality
MDedge Internal Medicine
In Lecanemab Alzheimer Extension Study, Placebo Roll-Over Group Does Not Catch Up
MDedge Internal Medicine
Heart Failure the Most Common Complication of Atrial Fibrillation, Not Stroke
MDedge Internal Medicine
Antipsychotics for Dementia Pose Wide-Ranging Health Risks
MDedge Internal Medicine