BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—Thelma Atkins ended up at UAB Hospital-Highlands after a neighbor in her senior living center ran over her feet with a motorized scooter.
Terri Middlebrooks, a nurse at the hospital, tried to figure out how active the 92-year-old Atkins was before the incident. “Are you up and moving at home?” she asked.
“I can manage, but I have to have help sometimes,” Atkins replied.
Atkins said she uses a walker to visit friends and to get to the communal dining room. But she's also fallen a few times in recent years.
“Don't quit walking here,” Middlebrooks told her. “It's the most important thing you can do. ... This bed is not your friend.”
Middlebrooks is the coordinator of a unit designed to address the challenges specific to caring for the elderly. She told her new patient that throughout her stay, one of the main goals would be to keep her active.
The hospital's effort to get older patients up and moving is far from typical. Despite a growing body of research that shows staying in bed can be harmful to seniors, many hospitals still don't put a high priority on making them walk.
At UAB Hospital-Highland's 26-bed geriatric unit, known as Acute Care for Elders, patients are encouraged to start moving as soon as they arrive. The unit is one of a few hundred around the U.S. attempting to provide better and more tailored care to geriatric patients.
The facility, which is one of the campuses of the teaching hospital for the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine, opened the unit in 2008 with the recognition that the elderly population was growing and that many older patients didn't fare well in the hospital. ACE units are based on the idea that if the unique needs of seniors are met, they will have better outcomes and their care will be less costly.