Gerontological medicine is a general topic. This is a medicine process that is done with age. It is mainly home care and occupies a considerable part of internal medicine (Stone, 2011). The main focus of occupation is to prevent (if not treating) the elderly with disease or disability by age. The main feature is the age at which gerontological medicine is needed. However, the circumstances of the results faced by perceived individuals are sometimes unfavorable and have a significant impact on the autonomy of the elderly.
There are many health problems for elderly people with complicated and multifactorial causes. Healthcare workers providing medical services to the elderly identify these problems as "senile syndrome" (Inouye, Studenski, Tinetti, and Kuchel, 2007). Several senile syndromes are recognized as pressure sores, urinary incontinence, falls, hypofunction, and paralysis. There are many other such syndromes that may exist but has not been fully studied or documented. To provide adequate care for traumatized elderly patients, health care providers need to consider the effects on these syndromes and the elderly.
There is little incentive to encourage elderly physicians and medical students to specialize in gerontological medicine. According to the American Gerontological Society, it is an accepted occupation, but in the United States about 9,000 American senior medical doctors and hundreds of osteoarthritis (DO) are certified by the elderly and approved by the board of about 2,400 . Psychiatrists (psychiatrists, trained psychiatrists to deal with the needs of mentally handicapped people and the specific syndrome faced by the elderly)
The American Gerontological Society (AGS) has released the second most updated and expanded BeersCriteria® (list of drugs deemed unsuitable for the elderly) and one of the reference tools most frequently quoted in gerontological medicine did. The association also launched a series of new companion resources, including a list of alternative therapies for potentially inappropriate medications and more detailed guidance on best practices for implementing AGS recommendations. All of these are available free of charge at Geriatrics CareOnline.
We introduced the American Geriatric Medical Association (AGS) beer standard in 2015. As with the 2012 AGS beer standards, they contain a list of inappropriate medications that elderly people may avoid. The new criteria is to choose a list of medications to avoid or to adjust the dose according to the individual's renal function and to select a drug interaction record related to the dangers of the elderly. The goal is to systematically evaluate and score the evidence using the modified Delphi method for the 2012 AGS beer standards and to compare the 13 interdisciplinary elderly medical care and drugs It is to update to the treatment panel. The standard has reached an agreement. This process follows an evidence-based approach using the Institute of Medicine's standards. 2015 The AGS beer standard is applicable to all elderly people, not including palliative care and hospice care. J Am Geriatr Soc 2015
The American Gerontological Society 2015 updated criteria for the possibility of inappropriate use of beer for the elderly