Improving collateral history taking in the geriatric population.

Abstract

Introduction The geriatric population has a high incidence of dementia, delirium and frailty meaning often these patients cannot give comprehensive histories themselves. We are left with missing pieces of the puzzle; we might not know their ‘normal’ and frequently ask: ‘Are they always like this?’ A collateral history becomes a valuable tool, contributing to a Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment and assisting the whole MDT to make informed decisions for patient-centred care. The primary aim of this project was to improve the quality of collateral histories taken for patients admitted to the geriatric wards, with content measured against 8 domains. A secondary aim was to encourage timely collateral histories within 48 hours of admission to the ward. Method Using PDSA methodology, collateral histories were analysed before and after implementation of a poster and teaching session. Results At baseline each domain was covered a mean of 40.5% of the time (range 9%—81%). Following intervention this increased by 22% to 62.5% (range 18%—89%), demonstrating a significant improvement (paired t-test, P < 0.05). It was already common practice to take collateral histories within 48 hours of admission to the ward (91%) which was sustained post-intervention (88%). Conclusion Use of a poster as a prompt, and delivering teaching, led to more thorough collateral histories. This suggests two barriers are knowing what to ask and perceived importance, elements which could be integrated into early postgraduate education. The impact on patient care has the potential to be significant and multidimensional but further work would be needed to understand this.https://academic.oup.com/ageing/article-abstract/54/Supplement_1/afae277.052/7985005?login=tru

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East Midlands Evidence Repository (EMER)

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Last time updated on 28/06/2025

This paper was published in East Midlands Evidence Repository (EMER).

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