5M of geriatric care

A holistic framework used in geriatric care: Mind, Mobility, Medication, Multicomplexity, Matters Most.

Advancing Frailty

Used to refer to older people whose frailty has progressed to a moderate or severe stage.

Compassionate communities

Defined as communities that actively work together to provide social, emotional and practical support.

Family

Defined as a wider social network around the older person. This can be close relatives, but also friends, neighbours and community connections.

Home

Defined as a space, not a place.

Interdependency

Defined as a state of interconnection with others, based on connectedness, mutuality and reciprocity.

Parallel planning

Defined as the possibility of multiple different outcomes.

Watchful waiting

Defined as an approach to care 
that engages assessment over time, but does not always require changes to intervention.

Identification and assessment of need with the context of uncertainty

Level 1


Supporting older people living with frailty requires being able to identify, hold and respond to fluctuating needs

What the Identification and assessment of need with

the context of uncertainty looks like:

 

  • Involves parallel planning
  • Involves communicating what uncertainty might look like with the older person and family
  • Involves early and ongoing conversations about different phases of life, where health goals may change
  • Enables early identification of palliative care needs across the system
  • Enables flexible, integrated care that can respond to uncertainty
  • Enables a clear understanding of care pathways and criteria
  • Enables access to advanced knowledge and skills to support complexity
  • Supported by shared policies
  • Supported by earlier access to palliative care
  • Supported by the evidence building at a regional, national and global level
  • Leadership that supports staff wellbeing
  • Build an evidence base on innovative practice: Examples
    — Caregivers given end-of-life medication
    — Out of hours/crisis teams
  • Engagement in the use of multidisciplinary care plans and reviews
  • Use of liaison workers across teams
  • Use of planned decision-making throughout care

Resources and guidelines

Frailty identification and assessment

Supporting older people living with frailty requires early intervention and personalised care

Read

Identification and assessment of need with the context of uncertainty

Supporting older people living with frailty requires being able to identify, hold and respond to fluctuating needs

Read

Current and future wishes and goals of care

Supporting older people living with frailty requires engagement in conversations about values, preferences and goals of care

Read

Key clinical considerations in severe frailty

Supporting older people living with frailty requires the consideration of the multidimensional needs of the individual

Read

The identification and support of family

Supporting older people living with frailty requires the consideration of the family and wider social networks around the older person

Read