Category: Your Health & Wellness

  • Aspirin is good at preventing blood clots post-surgery. Why don’t hospitals use it?

    Aspirin is good at preventing blood clots post-surgery. Why don’t hospitals use it?

    A recent study found that patients benefit as much from aspirin post-surgery as they do from costly and painful injectables. Both prevent blood clots in patients who have severely fractured a bone, but most hospitals continue to treat patients with the costly injectables. Researchers make the case that prescribing the injectables has serious health equity consequences in a Stat News op-ed and question provider behavior.

    Patients are burdened with far lower costs for aspirin than the low-molecular weight heparin injectables. And, it’s easier for them to take a pill than to get an injection. However, hospitals and physicians appear not to consider health equity issues or simple cost-effectiveness, for that matter, when they treat patients.

    The goal post bone-fracture surgery is to prevent clots, which keep blood from flowing in the lungs and can cause deadly embolisms. And, again, two aspirins a day work just as well as the painful injections into patients’ stomach wall twice a day for three or four weeks post surgery, even for high-risk patients. Moreover, six days of injections cost at least $70 and as much as $300, while the bottle of aspirin costs a few dollars.

    Health insurers will generally pay for the injectable drug even though the less costly aspirin alternative is just as good. But, the injectable drug drives up  patients’ out-of-pocket costs and members’ premiums. Moreover, people prescribed the injectable after their surgery post bone fracture often don’t take it, making it more likely that they will have a blood clot.

    Physicians do not appear to consider that lower-income people, in particular, often do not have the means–financial or social–to comply with the injectable regimen. Only about 15 percent of physicians prescribe aspirin directly after surgery to treat a bone fracture. Only about half of physicians prescribe aspirin to patients after they are discharged.

    At many hospitals, policies have not changed notwithstanding the results of the clinical study showing aspirin’s efficacy. It appears that the hospitals would benefit financially if they used aspirin and stopped using the injectables.

    The insurers should have a role to play. After all, the insurers claim that they offer “value.” Why aren’t they insisting that aspirin is the most cost-effective treatment and refusing to cover the injectable drug post bone-fracture surgery? Are they somehow benefiting financially from patients taking the injectables?

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • Caregiving: Keeping Parents Healthy – Water, Walking, Watch out for Delirium

    Caregiving: Keeping Parents Healthy – Water, Walking, Watch out for Delirium

    Just call me lunchmeat. Not that I’m complaining, but that’s sometimes how I feel after several years of the pressure and crunch of over-stuffed Sandwich Generation duties. Now my parents are settled into their new home,and the kids are alright. Although I’ve continued to practice geriatric psychiatry part-time, I feel like I can pry open those crusts of whole wheat and move some of those back-burner projects, like writing and sharing health care advice, to the front.

    My mother and father share a room in a nursing home, labeled the “Health Center,” in the continuing care community where they moved four years ago—I had to check my resume for the date—as it was when I last held a full-time job. Both have dementia. My father carries a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease. My mother has vascular dementia; her atrial fibrillation caused her heart to throw tiny blood clots to her brain, which led to “mini-strokes.”

    My parents have stayed out of the hospital for almost a year. This is a triumph for my sisters and me, and for the nurses, aides, therapists, and doctors involved in their care. I’ve come up with three basics (for starters here) that have contributed to keeping my parents healthy–water, walking and watching out for delirium. These were important when they were still in their apartment as well. They’re important for everyone.

    Water – Everyone’s heard this before but sometime’s it’s so incredibly hard to get older people (especially your mother!) to drink enough. As we age, we don’t get the ‘thirsty’ signal transmitted as strongly to our brains as when we were younger; it’s easier to become dehydrated. Lack of water can lead to low blood pressure and falls, to electrolyte imbalances and heart problems, to bladder and kidney infections, just to name a few.

    Women of my mother’s generation didn’t walk around with water bottles or some other container of liquid constantly in their hand like many of us do. In addition, as older bladders start to leak, and going to the bathroom requires help, they may hold back on fluids on purpose.

    It’s wise to ask the person you’re caring for what he or she likes to drink. As long as weight or diabetes or some other health issue isn’t a problem, give the person what she or he wants. Juices, tea, coffee, even soda, given that it’s not likely to be very much.

    A plastic cup like they have in hospitals has helped. The handle on the side makes it easy to grasp, and the top and the straw easy to sip from. Putting the person’s name on the cup and maybe a picture he or she likes can help get their attention. How about “Drink to Your Heart’s Content!” I like Alice in Wonderland; I’ll want Alice and a “Drink Me” tag on mine.

    Try to remember to offer (not just suggest) your mom (or dad) the cup as many times as is reasonable whenever you are visiting. Walk in with your own bottle (of water, juice, soda) and say, “I hate to drink alone”, or just “Cheers.”

    Walking – The maintenance of strength, balance, and flexibility as well as getting one’s heart pumping continue to be important whatever your stage of life. Exercise is at or near the top of the list for keeping your brain healthy too. An increasing number of studies show that exercise appears to slow the decline in memory and other brain functions in people who have dementia.

    My father continues to visit the same gym he frequented before joining my mother to live in the nursing home. He pedals the stationary bike and lifts light weights twice weekly with the encouragement and under the supervision of the physical training staff. He looks forward to going to see “the girls,” though he no longer remembers their names. One of my sisters or I must accompany him to the gym (and back), as the building is a couple of blocks from where he lives, and he can no longer navigate there himself.

    My mother goes to physical therapy twice weekly. The therapy room is in the same building as where she lives, so it’s easy for staff to come for her. It’s also another social outlet, with the therapists and other residents. The cost is out-of-pocket and about $60 an hour (per session), comparable to personal-training sessions. (But, Medicare should cover some physical therapy costs if your doctor prescribes it to maintain or restore function and it is provided by a Medicare-certified therapist.) My sisters and I also get both parents walking whenever we can—outside when it’s not too hot (in south Florida).

    Watching for delirium – When my mother told me, “They took me in the middle of the night to a shack in the boonies, a place in the swamp with nothing around except grass that swished all night with the rain . . . ,” I called her doctor to tell her my mother very most likely had another bladder infection and needed to be treated ASAP.

    Although she was speaking perfectly coherently on the phone, my mother had been delirious the night before. She could acknowledge the improbability of the swamp scenario, although she kept referring to it. Her nurse said she had no fever, hadn’t been needing the bathroom more than usual, nor did she feel any burning sensations. This lack of specific symptoms is common in people her age.

    It’s also common for family members to be the ones to notice that mom is expressing strange ideas, or is looking more sleepy or acting more irritably than her usual self. In nursing homes, bladder, or urinary tract infections, are the most common cause of sepsis, which is infection getting into the blood and possibly into other organs. These infections account for one-third of hospitalizations of patients in long-term care facilities, and studies show mortality rates ranging from 4 to 15.5%.

    Dementia is the strongest risk factor for delirium. Even after recovering from an acute episode of an infection with delirium, brain function often worsens. Each time a person becomes delirious, it’s like the tide goes out a little further on his or her brain and never quite comes all the way back in. Besides infections, dehydration can lead to delirium, as can malnutrition, drug reactions, and lack of sensory stimulation, which can occur in an intensive care unit or with very impaired eyesight or hearing

    More about risk factors for delirium and how to recognize it can be found here from the Hospital Elder Life Program for Prevention of Delirium.

    This article first appeared on Just Care on April 3, 2015.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • Cancer screenings bring benefits at substantial cost

    Cancer screenings bring benefits at substantial cost

    We’ve come a long way in being able to screen for a variety of cancers and less far in curing people with mid- to late-stage cancer. We still need to make sure everyone takes advantage of these cancer screenings; they are important for ensuring survival from cancer. Fortunately, people with Medicare can get several cancer screenings at no cost.

    Many people with Medicare don’t yet benefit from these free cancer screenings. One recent study found that only about 50-60 percent of people with Medicare get breast and colorectal cancer screenings as recommended.

    The cost of screening Americans for five different types of cancer is now $43 billion a year, according to a new estimate published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, reports Gina Kolata for The New York Times. The researchers estimated the cost of breast, cervical, colorectal, lung and prostate cancer screenings.

    Of the $43 billion spent each year on cancer, more than $22 billion is to cover the cost of colonoscopies. But, colonoscopies can both detect and prevent cancer. Physicians can remove growths on the colon that can become cancer over time.

    How beneficial are screenings? The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an independent entity that grades the value of screenings, recommends lung, breast, cervical and colorectal screenings as a way to reduce the likelihood of death. It does not take a position on the value of prostate screenings.

    Cancer death rates have dropped significantly in the last 40 or so years, some say because many people have stopped smoking, improved their diets and otherwise take better care of themselves than in the past. The death rate from colon cancer has dropped by half. Today, about half of all eligible individuals are screened for colon cancer.

    One clinical trial found that screening possibly reduced the likelihood of death from colorectal cancer by one third over 30 years.  That sounds like a lot, and I don’t want to minimize it. Yet, it’s important to note that the overall risk fell to two percent from three percent.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • How to prevent falls and their sometimes horrific consequences

    How to prevent falls and their sometimes horrific consequences

    According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), more than one in four people over 65 fall each yearand around three million end up in the emergency room or as a hospital inpatient. Falls are increasing, even though they are preventable. Falls are also costly. In the period between 2016 and 2018, the average annual cost of falls among older adults was $80 billion.

    For older adults, the consequences of a fall can be particularly horrific, restricting people’s activities, if not robbing them of their independence. According to the CDC, falls are the leading cause of injury and injury death among people 65 and older.

    How to prevent falls?

    1. Talk to your doctor about the side effects of the medications you’re taking, both prescription and over-the-counter drugs. Some medicines can make you dizzy and more prone to falls.
    2. Make your home safer. Remove any loose rugs or tack them to the floor. Install grab bars in the bathroom. Use night lights.
    3. Stand up slowly after sitting to avoid light-headedness.
    4. Have your eyesight and hearing checked each year.
    5. Use a cane or walker for stability.
    6. Do balance and strength exercises.
     Here are five exercises to improve balance that the NIH recommends: (more…)
  • Aging in place: Safety at home

    Aging in place: Safety at home

    Most of us would like to remain in our homes as we age, and there are an increasing number of resources and services to aid those who wish to “age in place.” For improved safety, you will likely want to do home modifications. Some modifications are easy; others take more serious renovations.

    About four out of five older people own their homes. To continue to live safely in them, many need modifications. Here are some tips from the National Institute on Aging, AARP and Aging in Place

    Easy modifications to eliminate tripping hazards and prevent falls:

    • Remove throw rugs
    • Take care to keep electrical and phone cords out of the way
    • Remove low furniture
    • Remove or create a place for the bedspread; many an older person has tripped on a bedspread spilling out onto the floor
    • Move or remove all clutter

    More serious renovations for convenience and easy access:

    • If you have stairs at the entrance to your home, install a sloping walkway for ease of access and make sure pathways are clear and not slippery; the house number should be free and clear for emergency medical personnel to see, should the need arise
    • If you have a multi-story home, explore whether you could exclusively on the first floor to avoid stairs; if you use stairs, consider installing a stairlift
    • Widen doorways to accommodate wheelchairs and walkers; replace doorknobs and bathroom faucets with lever handles for ease of opening
    • Install counter space of variable heights in the kitchen, for those who wish to, or have to sit
    • Adjust shelving so that needed objects are within easy reach, or move those objects so that they can be reached without climbing or stretching
    • Ensure adequate lighting; nightlights that come on automatically should especially be placed near stairs, in hallways, and near bathrooms
    • Raise electrical outlets to 18 inches off the floor, so one doesn’t have to bend quite as low to plug and unplug
    • In the bathroom, grab bars become a must; check to make sure toilet seat is at a convenient height or needs raising; benches in the shower are a big help; they can be built in if a bathroom is being renovated; hand-held showerheads can be used for those using benches, as well as accommodating those standing
    • Some guides recommend smoke and carbon monoxide detectors on every level of the home. Make sure you can hear them

    Some of these home modifications can be expensive, running into the thousands of dollars. But, they can also keep you from falling or otherwise hurting yourself and needing a caregiver or having to move, which is bound to be far costlier.

    You might be able to get help paying for these modifications. If you have Medicaid, it may help cover the cost of home modifications, depending where you live. And the Veterans Administration may also cover the cost of some home modifications.
    Occupational therapists can generally recommend key home modifications. There is also a growing industry of Certified Aging in Place Specialists.  Check with your area agency on aging.
    [N.B. This post was originally published on July 8, 2019.]
    Here’s more from Just Care:

     

  • Do you have a durable power of attorney?

    Do you have a durable power of attorney?

    Life has its curve balls, as we all know. And, we and the people we love are all better off if we’re prepared for them. That’s why everyone should have a durable power of attorney.

    A durable power of attorney is a legal document through which you name someone to help with your financial affairs at any time that you cannot handle them yourself. The person you name should be someone you trust with your finances, someone who could make decisions about your finances if the need arises. The person who has your durable power of attorney also could be your health care proxy or health care buddy.

    If you don’t already have a durable power of attorney, you should be able to download a free durable power of attorney form for your state online.

    Why should you give someone a durable power of attorney? Giving someone you trust a durable power of attorney should give you peace of mind that your affairs will be taken care as you would like, if you cannot take care of them.Without a durable power of attorney, it’s not clear whether your bills and other financial needs will be taken care of. Whoever stepped up to manage your affairs would have to go through an expensive and lengthy court proceeding to get approval to manage your affairs. Unless you choose the person who will have your durable power of attorney, a judge might appoint someone you do not trust to handle your affairs.

    How long does a durable power of attorney last? Your durable power of attorney lasts until you die or you change your durable power of attorney.

    What is the difference between a durable power of attorney and a power of attorney? If you simply give someone a power of attorney, then the person you designate only has authority over whatever financial matters you specify until you become mentally incompetent. But, if you choose, you can make the power of attorney document a durable power of attorney. You need only include language in the power of attorney that specifies that the person you designate has authority if you become mentally incompetent. Unless you make the power of attorney a durable power of attorney, the person you designate cannot handle your financial affairs after you become mentally incompetent.

    Who should have a copy of your durable power of attorney? You should give a copy of the durable power of attorney to all financial institutions at which you have accounts. You should also let the person to whom you give durable power of attorney know that the person has durable power of attorney. You can give that person a copy of the document or let the person know where to find it in your home.

    If you give someone a durable power of attorney, will that person be able to take money from your bank accounts? Yes. The person you name as having durable power of attorney, your financial agent, will be able to take care of your financial affairs using your bank accounts if you give them that authority. But, this agent does not own the money in your accounts and may not take money from your accounts for himself or herself.

    What should you discuss with the person to whom you give durable power of attorney?  You should let the person know about all institutions with which you have financial arrangements, including your banks, credit card companies, financial advisors and insurance companies. You should let the banks, credit card companies and financial advisors know to whom you have given durable power of attorney.

    Can you change or cancel the durable power of attorney? Yes. You can cancel or change your durable power of attorney at any time by destroying it and notifying the financial institutions at which you have accounts that you have destroyed it or changed it.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • Three steps to prepare for an at-home emergency

    Three steps to prepare for an at-home emergency

    Jancee Dunn reports for the New York Times on how to prepare for an at-home emergency. When the ambulance arrives, in many instances, speed can be life-saving. If you or someone you love has suffered a heart attack or stroke, your brain can suffer irreparably within minutes.

    How to get emergency services at home: Sometimes, you’ll have to call 911. But, sometimes, you’ll be able to contact the ambulance company directly. So, before any emergency arises, contact the hospital you’d want to be admitted to in an emergency to learn which ambulance company you should use to get there, write down the company’s name and phone number and put it in a safe place.

    Keep your costs down: Double-check with your insurer that your health insurance will cover that ambulance.

    Keep in mind that hospital emergency rooms are not equal. Some are far better than others. Make sure you choose an emergency room that will meet your needs.

    If you call 911, let the ambulance company know the hospital you want to be taken to. The ambulance generally will take you to the nearest hospital. But, if you live in a city, there might be several hospitals within a short distance. If so, the ambulance should be able to take you to the hospital of your choice.

    Three steps to prepare for a trip to the ER:

    1. Put together your personal information–your name, birthdate and information about your health, including your blood type, the medications you are taking. Share the document with family and friends.
    2. If you’re home alone, make sure that your personal and health information is easy for a stranger to locate. Tape it to your front door. Enter it on your mobile phone medical ID page. Medical ID information does not require a password to access.
    3. If an ambulance is coming to your home, if possible, unlock the front door so it’s easy to enter.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • Housekeeping is good for healthy aging, especially if you don’t sit around watching a lot of TV

    Housekeeping is good for healthy aging, especially if you don’t sit around watching a lot of TV

    New research from the Nurses’ Health Study, reported in JAMA, offers some hope for those of us who are not inclined to spend a lot of time exercising. The good news, reports Alvin Powell for the Harvard Gazette: Even the little things you do each day to move your body is good for healthy aging, including good mental and physical health.

    We know that people who are physically active are less likely to die early. But, these findings show that physical activity comes in a multitude of forms! You don’t have to exercise intensely to help your health as you age.

    If you do housekeeping or gardening and are moving around a bunch, you are ahead of the game. Though, you should still walk 20 minutes a day and get your heart rate up periodically! People who spend too much time sitting are more likely to pay a big price for their sedentary behavior in the form of memory loss or some heinous physical condition.

    Researchers at Harvard and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, among others, studied more than 45,000 people for more than two decades. Most noteworthy, they found that each incremental two hours of additional TV that some people watched, a proxy for being inactive, reduced their likelihood of healthy aging by 12 percent. But, each incremental two hours of mopping floors or tending to gardens increased people’s likelihood of healthy aging by six percent.

    What’s so bad about sitting around the TV all day, you ask? Your skeletal muscles atrophy. And, these muscles are critical for metabolizing glucose, preventing inflammation and ensuring good blood flow to your brain. And, for reasons that are unexplained, sitting around the TV is particularly harmful. Driving is better, as is sleeping.

    In short, almost anything you do other than watching TV, which requires only the most minimal physical and mental activity, will help promote healthy aging.

    Sadly, most people do not spend a lot of time moving as they age. In the study, only about one in 12 participants were sufficiently active to be aging healthily.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • Your heart rate can help you understand your physical fitness

    Your heart rate can help you understand your physical fitness

    If you carry a mobile phone, you already track the number of steps you take each day. Other devices can help you do even more. Talya Minsburg reports for The New York Times on the benefits of tracking your heart rate.

    Smartwatches and fitness trackers will tell you a bunch about the health of your heart.  They can also track heart rate zones and changes in your heart rate. You can improve your health with this information.

    The information you can glean from smartwatches and fitness trackers can help you understand how fit you are and your fitness trends. If you’re an athlete, the information can help you with speed and endurance.

    If you don’t use a smartwatch or tracking device, you can still know your resting heart rate simply by putting your finger on your wrist or neck and counting beats for 15 seconds, Your resting heart rate is that number of beats times four.

    Healthy hearts beat about 15 to 25 times every 15 seconds or 60 to 100 times a minute. People who exercise a lot generally have lower rates.

    If you want to know your maximum heart rate, count the number of beats while you are exercising strenuously.

    Heart rate zone training can help build your endurance.  There are five heart rate zones.  Zone one is a relatively easy workout, in which you reach only about half of your maximum heart rate.

    Zones two through five require more effort. Zone two and three are good for building endurance. Zone two is a good zone for running or bicycling. Zone three takes still more effort; you might find you will need to take some breaths as you exercise.

    Zones four and five teach your body to function with less oxygen. Zone four is hard enough that you can only stay at this heart rate for a limited time.  Zone five is intense, in which you reach your full or nearly full heart rate. You cannot be talking at this level.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • Why social health is as important as physical and mental health

    Why social health is as important as physical and mental health

    I’ve written a bunch about the value of a buddy or buddies to your overall health, as well as the health costs of social isolation. A new piece by Kasley Killam in The Guardian lays out why “social health” is worth paying attention to. In a few words, it is as important as food and water.

    Curiously social health remains underappreciated in the US. We tend to focus on exercise, eating right, avoiding alcohol and tobacco and getting a good night’s sleep as the best ways to stay healthy. No question that these activities all improve physical and mental health.

    But, social interactions take physical and mental health to a whole other level. We all need people to support us, whether in an emergency or when we’re having a bad day. We need time alone. and we need time with family and friends.

    Relationships–both friendships and romantic relationships–as well as simply hanging out with others can lengthen our lives and stave off chronic conditions. When we build relationships with others, we improve our social health. We enhance our self-worth.

    There’s been a bunch written of late on the health risks of loneliness. The US Surgeon General called it a public health emergency in 2017. But, there has been less written on the health benefits of relationships. And, the data suggest that Americans are increasingly less healthy socially.

    Since the mid-90’s, for example, 2o percent fewer Americans enjoy a cadre of 10 or more close friends. And in the last ten years, 20 percent fewer Americans participate in communities. No question that we are further isolated in the wake of Covid-19.

    One national survey found that around 50 percent of Americans felt that they had no close friends or family who understood them.

    While the data suggests that Americans are not doing well from a social health perspective, people in other countries are also not doing well on the social health front. One Gallup poll found that, all told, 330 million adults don’t speak with friends or family for weeks at a time. One in five adults around the world say they have no one to connect with if they need help.

    Without social connections, the data show that people’s likelihood of stroke increases by 32 percent, dementia likelihood is up 50 percent and premature death by 29 percent. But, 80 percent of people in the US and UK, who lack social relationships do not appreciate the severity of their situation for their health and well-being.

    Everyone needs connection and community, whether lonely or not. So, nourish your relationships, don’t ignore them or put them aside. For your health!!!

    Here’s more from Just Care: