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Featured researches published by Darryl Wieland.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1991

Impacts of Geriatric Evaluation and Management Programs on Defined Outcomes: Overview of the Evidence

Laurence Z. Rubenstein; Andreas E. Stuck; Albert L. Siu; Darryl Wieland

Comprehensive geriatric assessment is a technique for multidimensional diagnosis of frail elderly people with the purpose of planning and/or delivering medical, psychosocial, and rehabilitative care. When comprehensive geriatric assessment is coupled with some therapy, then the term geriatric evaluation and management (GEM) will be used. Following a brief history of comprehensive geriatric assessment, we describe the varied patterns of GEM program organization and review the literature of studies examining GEM effectiveness. Program diversity complicates drawing firm conclusions about GEM effects; however, the vast majority of studies report positive, if not uniformly significant, results. Our analysis suggests that much of the variability in findings is due to sample size limitations


British Journal of Sports Medicine | 2003

Effects of physical activity on exercise tests and respiratory function

Yiling J. Cheng; Caroline A. Macera; Cheryl L. Addy; F S Sy; Darryl Wieland; Steven N. Blair

Background: Exercise is an important component of pulmonary rehabilitation for patients with chronic lung disease. Objective: To explore the role of physical activity in maintaining cardiac and respiratory function in healthy people. Methods: Cardiorespiratory fitness was measured by a maximal treadmill test (MTT), and respiratory function was tested by spirometry. The cross sectional study included data from 24 536 healthy persons who were examined at the Cooper Clinic between 1971 and 1995; the longitudinal study included data from 5707 healthy persons who had an initial visit between 1971 and 1995 and a subsequent visit during the next five years. All participants were aged 25–55 years and completed a cardiorespiratory test and a medical questionnaire. Results: In the cross sectional study, after controlling for covariates, being active and not being a recent smoker were associated with better cardiorespiratory fitness and respiratory function in both men and women. In the follow up study, persons who remained or became active had better MTT than persons who remained or became sedentary. Men who remained active had higher forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC) than the other groups. Smoking was related to lower cardiorespiratory fitness and respiratory function. Conclusions: Physical activity and non-smoking or smoking cessation is associated with maintenance of cardiorespiratory fitness. Change in physical activity habits is associated with change in cardiorespiratory fitness, but respiratory function contributed little to this association during a five year follow up.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1984

The Sepulveda VA Geriatric Evaluation Unit: Data on Four-year Outcomes and Predictors of Improved Patient Outcomes

Laurence Z. Rubenstein; Darryl Wieland; Patricia English; Karen R. Josephson; James Sayre; Itamar B. Abrass

Data from its first four operating years indicate that the Sepulveda VA Geriatric Evaluation Unit is having consistent beneficial effects on patient care. These benefits include improved diagnostic accuracy, reduced use of drugs, improved functional status, and improved placement location. However, not all patients benefit equally, and differences between patient responses highlight the need to select those who will benefit most from relatively costly Geriatric Evaluation Unit services. Discriminant and regression analyses were performed on 98 consecutive patients to determine which patients admitted to the Geriatric Evaluation Unit would show greatest improvement in terms of placement, functional status, one‐year survival, and living location, and which patients would be treated most efficiently in terms of length of stay. Patient characteristics on admission significantly associated with discharge home included a relatively high functional and cognitive status, the absence of an unstable medical problem, and not being expected to need nursing home placement by the referring physician. The latter two factors alone predicted actual placement location on the next 101 patients admitted to the Geriatric Evaluation Unit with high predictive accuracy (88.5 per cent). Factors predictive of patients whose functional status would improve on the Geriatric Evaluation Unit included absence of an unstable medical problem and being over 75 years old (predictive accuracy was 82.5 per cent). Two major factors associated with long patient stays on the Geriatric Evaluation Unit were low functional status scores and not living in own home or with family. These analyses indicate criteria that may be useful in selecting patients for inpatient geriatric evaluation and rehabilitation programs.


Aging Clinical and Experimental Research | 2008

From Bedside to Bench: summary from the American Geriatrics Society/National Institute on Aging Research Conference on Comorbidity and Multiple Morbidity in Older Adults

Cynthia M. Boyd; Christine S. Ritchie; Edmond F. Tipton; Stephanie A. Studenski; Darryl Wieland

Most aging patients have multiple concurrent health problems. However, most current medical practice and research are largely based on a single disease model, failing to account for the simultaneous presence of multiple conditions. Clinical trials, practice guidelines, and pay-for-performance schemes may thus have limited applicability in older patients. We report on the 2005 American Geriatrics Society/National Institute on Aging conference on Comorbid Disease and Multiple Morbidity in an Aging Society. The two-day conference was designed to clarify concepts of multiple concurrent health conditions; explore implications for causation, health, function and systems of care; identify important gaps in knowledge; and propose useful next steps. While the conference did not attempt to standardize terminology, we here develop the concepts of comorbidity, multiple morbidity, condition clusters, physiological health, and overall health as they were used. The present report also summarizes sessions addressing the societal burden of comorbidity, and clinical research on particular diseases within the framework of comorbidity concepts. Next steps recommended include continuing clarification of terms and conceptual approaches, consideration of developing and improving measures, as well as developing new research directions.


Aging Clinical and Experimental Research | 1989

Comprehensive geriatric assessment: Toward understanding its efficacy

Laurence Z. Rubenstein; A. L. Siu; Darryl Wieland

Comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) offers health care professionals a technique for multidimensional diagnosis of frail elderly people to plan medical, psychosocial, and rehabilitative care. In the present paper, we provide a brief history of geriatric assessment, a description of the varied organization of geriatric assessment programs (GAPs), and a review of published effectiveness studies of programs worldwide performing comprehensive geriatric assessment. Program diversity has complicated drawing conclusions about the efficacy of CGA from a literature reporting generally positive, but not uniformly significant, results. We suggest that sample size limitations explain much of the variability in findings. Using the techniques of meta-analysis, we evaluate the effect of GAPs on mortality when all controlled trials are considered cumulatively. Meta-analysis of six-month mortality demonstrates a statistically significant 36% reduction of mortality for inpatient CGA programs (odds ratio = 0.64; 95% confidence interval = 0.50 to 0.83), and a 32% mortality reduction for all CGA programs (odds ratio = 0.68; 95% confidence interval = 0.57 to 0.80). Further use of meta-analytic techniques can be employed to clarify the effect of GAPs on other important outcomes (e.g., reduced hospital and nursing home use, improved functional status), and to identify program characteristics best promoting these benefits.


Aging Clinical and Experimental Research | 2002

One-leg standing balance and functional status in an elderly community-dwelling population in Northeast Italy

A. G. Drusini; G. P. Eleazer; M. Caiazzo; E. Veronese; N. Carrara; C. Ranzato; F. Businaro; Rebecca Boland; Darryl Wieland

Background and aims: Development of simple and accurate indicators of frailty is an important research goal in aging societies. One-leg standing balance (OLSB) has been proposed as a component of a clinical index of frailty. Methods: We analyzed relationships between results of OLSB testing and multiple health risk factors and impairment/disability indicators in a sample of elderly subjects (N=102) participating in the Anchyses Project. Subjects were aged >65, lived in a home for the aged in Rovigo, Italy, and had no ADL dependencies or recent acute illnesses. Results: More than half (53%) failed the OLSB test while 36% were able to balance without difficulty. Significant differences were observed among OLSB performance groups in forced vital capacity (p=0.02S), dynamometry (p=0.001), age, physical activity, and IADL dependency (all p<0.001). Conclusions: OLSB performance is a marker of frailty and thus a potentially useful predictor of functional decline.


Aging Clinical and Experimental Research | 1996

What do we know about patient targeting in geriatric evaluation and management (GEM) programs

Darryl Wieland; Laurence Z. Rubenstein

Evidence indicates that institution-based programs for interdisciplinary geriatric evaluation and management (GEMs) improve outcomes of care, but results vary considerably between studies. Targeting (i.e., selective admission of frail elderly patient subgroups who are thought particularly to benefit) has been advocated as a means to improve the cost-effectiveness of GEM programs, and results from meta-analysis give this concept some support. Our review has several objectives: 1) describing approaches to GEM targeting and development of selection criteria; 2) assessing evidence from randomized trials concerning effects of targeting on outcome; and 3) suggesting an agenda for further research and development on GEM targeting.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2005

Geriatric Content in Medical School Curricula: Results of a National Survey

G. Paul Eleazer; Rupal Doshi; Darryl Wieland; Rebecca Boland; Victor Hirth

Despite recent gains in establishing academic sections, divisions, and departments of geriatrics in medical schools, much remains to be done to meet the medical needs of an aging population. To better understand how medical schools are educating students in geriatric‐related topics, all U.S. allopathic and osteopathic medical schools were surveyed in two waves, in 1999 and 2000, using a questionnaire based on recommendations from the Education Committee of the American Geriatrics Society. Responding schools were more likely to address diseases and conditions of aging, psychosocial issues, and ethical issues and less likely to cover anatomic changes, nutrition, knowledge of healthcare financing, outcome measurement, and cultural aspects of aging. Although limited, the results indicate that medical schools have increased coverage of aging‐related material, although further expansion of geriatric content will be necessary to meet the needs of an aging society.


Aging Clinical and Experimental Research | 1995

The Sepulveda GEU Study revisited: Long-term outcomes, use of services, and costs

Laurence Z. Rubenstein; Karen R. Josephson; Judith O. Harker; Douglas K. Miller; Darryl Wieland

The randomized controlled trial of the Geriatric Evaluation Unit (GEU) at the Sepulveda Veterans Hospital was the first to document the clinical and cost-effectiveness of hospital-based comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA). Frail elderly inpatients were assigned randomly to the GEU for CGA, therapy, rehabilitation, and placement (N=63), or to standard hospital care (N=60). At one year, GEU patients had much lower mortality (24% vs 48%) and were less likely to have been discharged to a nursing home (NH) (13% vs 30%), or to have spent any time in NHs (27% vs 47%). GEU patients were more likely to improve in personal self-maintenance and morale. Further, controls had substantially more acute-care hospital days, NH days, and hospital readmissions, resulting in higher direct institutional care costs, especially after survival adjustment. Here, we report the results of long-term follow-up. There was a significant survival effect through two years. Despite prolongation of life, there was no indication that quality of life was worse for survivors in the GEU group. In fact, the proportion of persons independent in ⩾2 ADLs at two years was somewhat higher for GEU patients (0.44) than controls (0.33) (z=1.27; p=0.056). By three years, 43% of GEU subjects and 38% of controls were still alive. Over the entire 3-year period, the per capita direct cost difference was not significant, either before or after survival adjustment (unadjusted:


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2013

Educational interventions to improve recognition of delirium: a systematic review.

Mamata Yanamadala; Darryl Wieland; Mitchell T. Heflin

37,091 GEU vs

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Laurence Z. Rubenstein

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Rebecca Boland

University of South Carolina

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G. Paul Eleazer

University of South Carolina

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Victor Hirth

University of South Carolina

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Ellen Roberts

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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G. P. Eleazer

University of South Carolina

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Roberto Bernabei

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Bruce Kinosian

University of Pennsylvania

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