key: cord-308014-130k8v21 authors: Happ, Mary Beth title: Family Caregiving for Acute-Critically Ill Older Adults in the Time of COVID-19 date: 2020-10-21 journal: Geriatr Nurs DOI: 10.1016/j.gerinurse.2020.10.008 sha: doc_id: 308014 cord_uid: 130k8v21 nan The idea for the column was spawned, as good ideas often are, over dinner and wine at a Gerontological Society of America annual meeting. As I recall, we lamented the relative dearth of interest in the science of geriatric acutecritical care at the conference and worried about the assumptions held by many students, funders, and colleagues that gerontological nursing focused exclusively on long-term care. And so, Liz Capezuti, Sarah Kagan, Lorraine Mion, and I joined together at the invitation (or was it challenge?) of Editor-in-Chief, Barbara Resnick, to address and amplify issues of significance in the care of acutecritically ill older adults. It is fitting that in this last year, we observed Geriatric Nursing's 40 th anniversary with several columns that involved "taking stock" of acute-critical care for older people as well as review of progress on ageism, physical restraint use, and accommodations for patient communication impairment in acute-critical care. In the past 12 years, scientific and practice initiatives addressed the hazards of hospitalization and immobility with strong evidence regarding the development and outcomes of iatrogenic "geriatric" syndromes, such as delirium, myopathy, falls, and cognitive/physical functional decline, during acute-critical illness. Critical care rehabilitation is now a multidisciplinary specialty area promoting early intervention to prevent post-hospital functional decline. More adults are surviving critical illness [1] and, thanks to curricular improvements and programs such as Nurses Improving Care for Healthsystem Elders, [2] more nurses have specialty knowledge about gerontological assessment and care principles. The anniversary year opened with the reminder that gerontological health care is no longer centered in the acute care hospital as it was 40 years ago but has shifted to home and community settings. [3] Nine months later, we are in the midst of a global pandemic that disproportionately sickens and kills older adults while seriously straining the acute-critical care workforce and resources. Vulnerable older patients enter acute-critical care settings without the supportive presence and advocacy of family caregivers. At the same time, the home setting has become a site for care across the continuum bolstered by telehealth for which family caregivers serve as technological support, interpreters, and implementers. Gerontological nurses are uniquely qualified to support family caregivers as they interact with acute-critical care in remote and creative ways during the COVID-19 pandemic. Family Caregiving for Older Adults admitted to Acute -Critical Care COVID-related family separation during acute-critical illness impacts older adult patients, family caregivers, and nurses on multiple levels and is likely to have long-term traumatic effects. [4] Restrictions on family visitation to prevent the spread of COVID-19 infection vary depending on local infection rates, institutional policies, and patient condition (e.g., allowances for end-of-life visitation). Information sharing, informed consent, treatment decision making, and end-of-life care may be impaired or inadequate in the absence of family caregivers. Disability advocates criticize and challenge hospital visitation restrictions as discriminatory toward persons with disability and promote policies permitting the "entrance of a designated support person for a patient with a disability and permitting family members, serviceproviders or other individuals knowledgeable about the needs of the person with a disability to serve as a designated support person." [5] Please consider the following recommendations adapted from Montauk and Kuhl [4] for how to support family caregivers during acute-critical illness: (3) Be present and authentic. Montauk and Kuhl [4] advise that nurses should not be afraid to show their emotions in an empathic way (that not burdensome or oversharing). The goal here would be one of therapeutic use of self to provide human connection and caring that family caregivers may desperately need in a time of crisis, isolation, and, in some cases, grief. in which 58% of caregivers reported performing medical/nursing tasks. The study found that caregivers performing medical/nursing tasks had higher risk of emotional stress, physical strain, and high burden of care than those who without those responsibilities. In the midst of pandemic quarantine restrictions, family caregivers of home-dwelling older adults face limitations in assistance and respite as they take measures to protect older adults from infection while also managing or co-managing care for the older person's multiple chronic conditions and acute events. For example, a family who previously shared caregiving may now have limited caregiving to one individual due to daily exposures of members who work in essential services or travel restrictions. While more flexible work-from-home schedules are advantageous for some family caregivers, others have lost or relinquished jobs outside the home. Clearly, the strain and sacrifice that family caregivers experience have multiplied during the pandemic. In addition, many community-based programs and settings for older adults (e.g., adult day programs, senior centers) that provide essential services to support family caregivers have limited services (e.g., lunch pick-up) or remain closed. Evidence suggests that these adult caregivers, most of who are over 50 years old, are also at risk for serious illness. A recent analysis of data from the Understanding America Study found higher proportions of poorer health during the pandemic across all outcomes among caregivers compared to noncaregivers. [8] Long-term caregivers reported the highest rates of poor health outcomes. Psychological distress was most common, reported by 46.5% of long-term caregivers vs 35.2% of noncaregivers. Somatic symptoms reported by long-term caregivers were also consistently much larger than noncaregivers (44%-60% higher). [8] Health policy and programmatic initiatives are desperately needed to provide tangible support for family caregivers of frail older adults. Geriatric nurses must make our voices heard about this issue in policy arenas now and until we realize an age-friendly future, free of the preconceptions, stereotypes, and discrimination we find in healthcare today. Changes in hospital mortality for United States intensive care admissions from 1988 to 2012 A scoping review of the evidence about the Nurses Improving Care for Healthsystem Elders (NICHE) program. The Gerontologist Taking stock of acute and critical care for older people: Looking forward toward improvement COVID-related family separation and trauma in the intensive care unit Is your hospital communication policy discriminatory? Online AARP and National Alliance for Caregiving. Caregiving in the United States Overburdened and underprepared: Medical/ nursing task performance among informal caregivers in the United States Caregivers mental health and somatic symptoms during COVID-19