“Shaping Ageing Education Together”: Community and stakeholder engagement to improve geriatric medicine education
Introduction Improving ageing education for health professionals requires meaningful involvement of those with lived experience. Giving older adults a voice in curriculum design and delivery helps shape education to be inclusive, authentic, and relevant, preparing students for person-centred care. Methods We hosted a community engagement outreach workshop, bringing together multidisciplinary health professions students (n=7: medicine; pharmacy) and educators (n=26), with older members of the public (n=8) and other key stakeholders in older peoples’ care (n=12: care home staff; charity
Sharing care home residents’ individual-level data between health and social care: a qualitative evaluation of the Data Sharing
Introduction: A large amount of data is collected on care home residents to support their daily care. The Data Sharing Partnership (DSP) project linked individual-level data held in care homes with health data, and co-designed dashboards to display back to care homes. This evaluation aimed to gather views and experiences of project participants to understand key processes and learnings to inform the development of an accessible and secure model for the use of individual-level care home data. Methods: Qualitative methods were undertaken through in-depth semi-structured interviews with DSP
Frailty Same Day Emergency Care: Onward Destination and Effective Utilisation of Virtual Wards
Introduction: This study of patients attending East Surrey Hospital’s (ESH) Frailty Same Day Emergency Care (FSDEC) unit was designed to assess the interrelationship between onward destination from FSDEC, including existing location-based virtual wards (VW) offering ongoing care and remote monitoring at home, outpatient clinics and comorbidity. In ESH in October 2024, a 6-space FSDEC was created. Patients are pulled from the ED in the morning, with a small number being referred from GPs and community Urgent and Emergency Care teams. Method: Data were reviewed from February 2025 to April 2025
Improving Clinical Frailty Scale documentation in surgical admissions of older patients: A Quality Improvement Project
How do care home staff use data to improve care in care homes for older people?
Improving compliance with Treatment Escalation Planning in Medicine of the Elderly (MOE) and Stroke.
Improving compliance with Treatment Escalation Planning in Medicine of the Elderly (MOE) and Stroke.
Improving exercise training for sarcopenia or frailty: Results from wave 2 of the BEPOP benchmarking and feedback initiative
Background Resistance exercise is an effective, but often suboptimally delivered therapy for sarcopenia and physical frailty in older people. The Benchmarking Exercise Programme for Older People (BEPOP) is a UK-wide quality improvement initiative that uses benchmarking and feedback to improve the quality of exercise delivery by physiotherapy services. We present results from wave 2 of BEPOP data collection. Methods NHS physiotherapy services across the UK submitted anonymised details for up to 20 consecutive patients referred for sarcopenia or frailty-related reasons. Data included sarcopenia
Evaluation of the role and impact of ward based Occupational Therapists for older people with hip fractures
Improving integration of resident doctors into the Geriatrics multi-disciplinary team (MDT) discussions
A Structured Approach to Delirium Assessment in Older Patients Using the 4AT Tool
18 months of OACOS: Evaluating the OACOS (Older Adults Cancer Optimisation Service) at a District General Hospital in Somerset
Introduction Increasing numbers of patients live with both frailty and cancer, highlights highlighting the need for onco-geriatric services. Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA) of older oncology patients increases QoL and treatment tolerance. Recent guidance from British Geriatrics Society stresses the importance of frailty assessment to identify and optimise frailty related issues, alongside collaborative decision-making with patients. Methods OACOS was created at a District General Hospital in Somerset to identify and medically optimise frail patients in whom the treating oncologist had
Impact of CFS and G8 score on patients assessed by the OACOS (Older Adults Cancer Optimisation Service) at a DGH in Somerset
Introduction Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA) should be considered in all older patients with a cancer diagnosis. Initial frailty screening may highlight those who would benefit most from CGA to optimise their health through radical treatment. The G8 score assesses multiple domains and has been validated in oncology patients: lower scores indicate frailty. In contrast the CFS is not specifically targeted at cancer patients and is often unfamiliar to oncologists. OACOS does not currently utilise the G8 or CFS in its referral criteria; oncologists refer based on concerns for patients
Acceptability of a Technology-Based Dual-Task Programme for Falls Prevention – A Mixed-Methods Study
Acceptability of a Technology-Based Dual-Task Programme for Falls Prevention – A Mixed-Methods Study
Reducing polypharmacy in geriatric patients: A deprescribing audit
Clinical Determinants of 180-day Hospital Readmission and Mortality in Older Adults with Dementia: A UK-Based Cohort Study
Improving bone health assessment in a geriatrics unit
Improving bone health assessment in a geriatrics centre: Natalie Maria Jones IMT3 Introduction: The National Osteoporosis Guideline Group (NOGG) quotes that one in five men and one in two women will experience a fragility fracture in their lifetime. The cost of fragility fractures to the NHS in 2019, exceeded £4 billion (1). An important and often overlooked aspect of falls assessment is that of osteoporosis detection and treatment. This project aimed to improve % of patients receiving a bone health assessment within a tertiary geriatric unit to 100% by September 2025. Method: The project took
Deprescribing medications with anticholinergic burden in older hospitalised adults: a systematic review
Eating with Colour:An Audit Investigating the Effect of Coloured Plates on Nutritional Intake in Patients with Dementia
Background Dementia is a syndrome of chronic progressive degeneration of the brain. Dementia causes reduced ability to self-feed due to problems with: swallow, apraxia and visuospatial dysfunction. Malnutrition in dementia patients is associated with delirium, longer admissions and functional decline. Aim To improve food intake in patients with dementia by 25% through the introduction of high-contrast coloured crockery on a Care of the Elderly ward. Methods Food charts were used on Care of the Elderly wards to assess food intake. In Cycle 1, coloured plates were introduced on Ward A, with pre
Abstract title : Clinical Leadership in Pathways using Care Providers: Improving Flow, Experience, and Efficiency for Frail Older Adults
Abstract title : Clinical Leadership in Pathways using Care Providers: Improving Flow, Experience, and Efficiency for Frail Older Adults Introduction: Frail older adults are often discharged from hospital with complex needs into community care services. Without senior clinical oversight, many experience fragmented care, delayed reviews, inappropriate care planning, and avoidable readmissions. This project evaluated the impact of introducing clinical leadership into a care provider pathway designed to deliver short-term, post-discharge domiciliary care. Methods: Over 11 weeks, 51 patients were