By: Audrey Post | Published: | 4:23 pm | SHARE:

News — Older Americans are steadily becoming a larger share of the population, a change that is especially notable in Florida. By 2040, the Sunshine State is expected to have almost 7 million older adults, with more than 1.2 million of those age 85 or older.

The at the Florida State University continues to lead efforts to reshape health care to serve older patients’ unique needs. It was recently awarded a five-year, $5 million grant from the federal Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).

HRSA’s Geriatrics Workforce Enhancement Program (GWEP) funds only two programs in Florida, and this is the third grant for the FSU-based North and Central Florida GWEP (NCF-GWEP) since its inception in 2015. Florida has the highest percentage of older adults of any state in the U.S., and the number of older adults moving to Florida from other states continues to increase.

“Nationally, geriatrics experts have been putting their heads together, knowing there will never be enough geriatricians to go around, to find out ‘What are we asking all health care services to do related to care of older adults?’” said Professor Lisa Granville, M.D., a nationally renowned geriatrician, chair of the College of Medicine’s Department of Geriatrics and the study’s principal investigator.

A commonly used framework called the 4Ms attempts to answer that question and develop an age-friendly health system: What Matters Most to older adults; Medication; Mobility; and Mentation, or mind health.

Through partnerships across the health care professions as well as with community, state and national organizations, GWEP specifically focuses on developing age-friendly health systems and dementia-friendly communities by training the geriatrics workforce and community to better meet the needs of older adults.

The Geriatrics Department in the College of Medicine is uniquely positioned to coordinate and lead the effort to improve health care for older adults. Part of the college’s mission is to train exemplary physicians to provide patient-centered care for the underserved, particularly elder, rural and minority residents.

“When you agree to be age-friendly, you put into place systems where you are diligent about addressing all four of those M’s,” Granville said. “You may have screening systems in place where you are routinely asking older adults, ‘Have you fallen in the last year or since our last visit?’”

Falling is the fifth leading cause of death for older adults, she said. “Many people don’t realize that half of older adults who fall can’t get back up by themselves, and it’s not because they were injured necessarily; it can be limited strength and flexibility that existed before the fall.”

Other processes may screen for cognitive impairment, depression, identify opportunities to reduce medications and other ways to improve quality of life. A goal is to avoid health care related harms an older patient may be more vulnerable to.

The grant to FSU will fund four projects, which involve nearly a dozen programs and partnerships:

The FSU is one of the partners in the project to train nurses. Assistant Dean Steven J. Palazzo agreed that Florida faces an urgent need for skilled geriatric care.

“By integrating 4M’s geriatric training into Bachelor of Science Nursing programs, we can equip future nurses to provide high-quality, compassionate care to older adults,” he said. “A post-baccalaureate certificate in geriatrics will further empower students with specialized skills, positioning them as leaders in transforming long-term care systems for seniors across the state.”

One of the community-based partners is PanCare of Florida, a non-profit with 16 Federally Qualified Health Center locations in North Florida, 12 of which are primary care medical clinics. The College of Medicine team will work with PanCare to transform its clinics into age-friendly sites, beginning with its largest clinic, located in Panama City, and eventually expanding to all locations.

“It’s really beyond training,” said Nicolette Castagna, community engagement and health systems manager within the Department of Geriatrics. “We’re building relationships with their leadership and getting to know their providers and staff, and together we’re basically looking at what is the experience of the older patient. We’re helping their staff to see that a little more clearly.”

The grant-funded work is being coordinated under the umbrella of .