Minding the gap: Prioritization of care issues among nurse practitioners, family physicians and geriatricians when caring for the elderly

By | 13th October 2014
Accumulating health problems of the elderly requires recognition of geriatric syndromes, while shifting away from a conventional disease-specific approach. 
Moore and colleagues recently surveyed 179 practitioners representing Family Physicians (FPs), Nurse Practitioners (NPs) and geriatricians in Ontario, in order to quantify how they prioritize syndromes, diseases and conditions in the elderly. Identifying differences may inform opportunities for interprofessional sharing of expertise among professionals pursuing a common goal, which is expected to improve interprofessional collaboration.
Their survey (response rate 36%) identifies that NP, FP and geriatrician respondents all recognize co-occurrence of “multiple morbidities” as one of the most frequently encountered issues when serving the elderly, however FPs and NPs place higher priority on managing individual chronic diseases than explicitly prioritizing geriatric syndromes. The findings identify a need for a more clearly defined role for the geriatrician as syndrome-educator and implies further need for collaborative approaches to caring for seniors that values different professional’s expertise.


One thought on “Minding the gap: Prioritization of care issues among nurse practitioners, family physicians and geriatricians when caring for the elderly

  1. Mosarrof Hossain

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