Advancing care of older adult patients
Across the US, the senior population are the fastest-growing segment of patients. These cases bring added complexities that make the delivery of optimal care more challenging for hospitals.
The American College of Surgeons developed the Geriatric Surgery Verification (GSV) Program with the generous support of The John A. Hartford Foundation to optimize surgical care for older adult patients. Through a program that is grounded in evidence-based standards, hospitals can confidently address the most important aspects of care and create plans to help patients achieve their care goals and hospitals to use their limited resources more effectively and efficiently.
Hospitals that participate in one of our Quality Programs, including the GSV Program, earn the distinction as an ACS Surgical Quality Partner (SQP).
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services released a new Age Friendly Hospital Measure based on work by the ACS and designed to improve the care and outcomes of older adult patients. All hospitals participating in the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program must report on their compliance with the measure beginning in 2025 and could face significant financial penalties if they fail to do so.
The measure goes into effect January 1 and the ACS is here to help.
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Specialized care through a dedicated program means elderly patients can maintain independence and quality of life after surgery. The GSV Program can preserve patient wellness and function and sets patients up for success following major surgery.
Hospitals that implement the GSV Program experience proven success and improvement of common problems for elderly surgical patients. The GSV Program helps hospitals prioritize:
Why this matters: The average cumulative cost per patient for treating postoperative delirium is $20,000. The risk of delirium can be significantly reduced if the proper protocols are followed.
Why this matters: Constant communication between the patient, caregivers and the care team help ensure the patient’s needs are addressed at every step of the surgical process.
Why this matters: Fewer complications mean better use of resources. Implementation of the GSV Program can help prevent specific injuries, like falls, in elderly patients. A reduction in common complications means decreased hospital resource use. With the GSV Program, participating hospitals have decreased the length of stay by 1-3 days, based on an average 5-day stay.
Why this matters: Dedicated team management means a return to function is prioritized for geriatric patients. GSV hospitals use multidisciplinary nursing rounding teams who focus on reducing length of stay through strategies like discharge plans and decision-making conferences.