New horizons in clinical practice guidelines for use with older people

Martin, F. C., Quinn, T. J. , Straus, S. E., Anand, S., van der Velde, N. and Harwood, R. H. (2024) New horizons in clinical practice guidelines for use with older people. Age and Ageing, 53(7), afae158. (doi: 10.1093/ageing/afae158) (PMID:39046117) (PMCID:PMC11267466)

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Abstract

Globally, more people are living into advanced old age, with age-associated frailty, disability and multimorbidity. Achieving equity for all ages necessitates adapting healthcare systems. Clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) have an important place in adapting evidence-based medicine and clinical care to reflect these changing needs. CPGs can facilitate better and more systematic care for older people. But they can also present a challenge to patient-centred care and shared decision-making when clinical and/or socioeconomic heterogeneity or personal priorities are not reflected in recommendations or in their application. Indeed, evidence is often lacking to enable this variability to be reflected in guidance. Evidence is more likely to be lacking about some sections of the population. Many older adults are at the intersection of many factors associated with exclusion from traditional clinical evidence sources with higher incidence of multimorbidity and disability compounded by poorer healthcare access and ultimately worse outcomes. We describe these challenges and illustrate how they can adversely affect CPG scope, the evidence available and its summation, the content of CPG recommendations and their patient-centred implementation. In all of this, we take older adults as our focus, but much of what we say will be applicable to other marginalised groups. Then, using the established process of formulating a CPG as a framework, we consider how these challenges can be mitigated, with particular attention to applicability and implementation. We consider why CPG recommendations on the same clinical areas may be inconsistent and describe approaches to ensuring that CPGs remain up to date.

Item Type:Articles
Keywords:Older people, guidelines, methodology, applicability, evidence-based, patient-centred.
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Quinn, Professor Terry
Authors: Martin, F. C., Quinn, T. J., Straus, S. E., Anand, S., van der Velde, N., and Harwood, R. H.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Health
Journal Name:Age and Ageing
Publisher:Oxford University Press
ISSN:0002-0729
ISSN (Online):1468-2834
Published Online:24 July 2024
Copyright Holders:Copyright © The Author(s) 2024
First Published:First published in Age and Ageing 53(7):afae158
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons licence

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