Kianna Montz
Regenstrief Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kianna Montz.
JAMA Internal Medicine | 2014
Alexia M. Torke; Greg A. Sachs; Paul R. Helft; Kianna Montz; Siu L. Hui; James E. Slaven; Christopher M. Callahan
IMPORTANCE Hospitalized older adults often lack decisional capacity, but outside of the intensive care unit and end-of-life care settings, little is known about the frequency of decision making by family members or other surrogates or its implications for hospital care. OBJECTIVE To describe the scope of surrogate decision making, the hospital course, and outcomes for older adults. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Prospective, observational study conducted in medicine and medical intensive care unit services of 2 hospitals in 1 Midwestern city in 1083 hospitalized older adults identified by their physicians as requiring major medical decisions. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Clinical characteristics, hospital outcomes, nature of major medical decisions, and surrogate involvement. RESULTS According to physician reports, at 48 hours of hospitalization, 47.4% (95% CI, 44.4%-50.4%) of older adults required at least some surrogate involvement, including 23.0% (20.6%-25.6%) with all decisions made by a surrogate. Among patients who required a surrogate for at least 1 decision within 48 hours, 57.2% required decisions about life-sustaining care (mostly addressing code status), 48.6% about procedures and operations, and 46.9% about discharge planning. Patients who needed a surrogate experienced a more complex hospital course with greater use of ventilators (2.5% of patients who made decisions and 13.2% of patients who required any surrogate decisions; P < .001), artificial nutrition (1.7% of patients and 14.4% of surrogates; P < .001), and length of stay (median, 6 days for patients and 7 days for surrogates; P < .001). They were more likely to be discharged to an extended-care facility (21.2% with patient decisions and 40.9% with surrogate decisions; P < .001) and had higher hospital mortality (0.0% patients and 5.9% surrogates; P < .001). Most surrogates were daughters (58.9%), sons (25.0%), or spouses (20.6%). Overall, only 7.4% had a living will and 25.0% had a health care representative document in the medical record. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Surrogate decision making occurs for nearly half of hospitalized older adults and includes both complete decision making by the surrogate and joint decision making by the patient and surrogate. Surrogates commonly face a broad range of decisions in the intensive care unit and the hospital ward setting. Hospital functions should be redesigned to account for the large and growing role of surrogates, supporting them as they make health care decisions.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2013
Alexia M. Torke; Peter H. Schwartz; Laura R. Holtz; Kianna Montz; Greg A. Sachs
To describe the perspectives of family caregivers toward stopping cancer screening tests for their relatives with dementia and identify opportunities to reduce harmful or unnecessary screening.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2014
Robin J. Bandy; Greg A. Sachs; Kianna Montz; Lev Inger; Robert W. Bandy; Alexia M. Torke
Unbefriended, incapacitated individuals who lack surrogates to make medical decisions present a complex problem to the healthcare providers who treat them. Adults without surrogates are among the most vulnerable in the community and are often alone and estranged from family, neglected and abused, and at risk of receiving inappropriate medical treatment. This article describes the program model and outcomes for the first 2 years of the Wishard Volunteer Advocates Program (WVAP), a guardianship program using trained, supervised volunteers as surrogates for unbefriended, incapacitated individuals. Of the 50 individuals enrolled during the study period, 20 were female, and 39 were Caucasian and 11 African American. Their average age was 67. Nineteen were insured with Medicare as primary and Medicaid as supplementary insurance. Ninety‐eight percent had four or more comorbid conditions at the time of the index hospitalization. Before program referral, many lived alone in unsafe conditions. Adult Protective Services was involved in almost half of the cases at the time of the index hospitalization. Approximately half of the participants required some type of property management. Healthcare usage data demonstrated that most were not receiving medical care before WVAP enrollment; the data indicated a decrease in emergency department visits and hospitalization after WVAP enrollment. The WVAP completed Medicaid applications for 12 participants, resulting in
JAMA Internal Medicine | 2013
Alexia M. Torke; Peter H. Schwartz; Laura R. Holtz; Kianna Montz; Greg A. Sachs
297,481.62 in reimbursement for the index hospitalization and a payer source for subsequent hospitalization and long‐term care. The volunteer advocate model provides an efficient and quality mechanism for providing unbefriended individuals with surrogates.
Archive | 2013
Alexia M. Torke; Peter H. Schwartz; Laura R. Holtz; Kianna Montz; Greg A. Sachs
American Journal of Critical Care | 2016
Alexia M. Torke; Lucia D. Wocial; Shelley A. Johns; Greg A. Sachs; Christopher M. Callahan; Gabriel T. Bosslet; James E. Slaven; Susan M. Perkins; Susan E. Hickman; Kianna Montz; Emily S. Burke
Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2018
Alexia M. Torke; Christopher M. Callahan; Greg A. Sachs; Lucia D. Wocial; Paul R. Helft; Patrick O. Monahan; James E. Slaven; Kianna Montz; Emily S. Burke; Lev Inger
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management | 2017
Alexia M. Torke; Patrick O. Monahan; Christopher M. Callahan; Paul R. Helft; Greg A. Sachs; Lucia D. Wocial; James E. Slaven; Kianna Montz; Lev Inger; Emily S. Burke
Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2017
Rohit Devnani; James E. Slaven; Gabriel T. Bosslet; Kianna Montz; Lev Inger; Emily S. Burke; Alexia M. Torke
PMC | 2016
Kristin N. Geros-Willfond; Steven S. Ivy; Kianna Montz; Sara E. Bohan; Alexia M. Torke