Feature

‘Medical Methuselahs’: Treating the growing population of centenarians


 

For about the past year, Priya Goel, MD, can be seen cruising around the island of Manhattan as she makes her way between visits to some of New York City’s most treasured residents: a small but essential group of patients born before the Empire State Building scraped the sky and the old Yankee Stadium had become the House That Ruth Built.

Dr. Goel, a family physician, works for Heal, a national home health care company that primarily serves people older than 65. Her practice has 10 patients older than 100 – the oldest is a 108-year-old man – whom she visits monthly.

The gray wave

Dr. Goel’s charges are among America’s latest baby boom – babies born a century ago, that is.

Between 1980 and 2019, the share of American centenarians, those aged 100 and up, grew faster than the total population. In 2019, 100,322 persons in the United States were at least 100 years old – more than triple the 1980 figure of 32,194, according to the U.S. Administration on Aging. By 2060, experts predict, the U.S. centenarian population will reach nearly 600,000.

Although some of the ultra-aged live in nursing homes, many continue to live independently. They require both routine and acute medical care. So, what does it take to be a physician for a centenarian?

Dr. Goel, who is in her mid-30s and could well be the great-granddaughter of some of her patients, urged her colleagues not to stereotype patients on the basis of age.

“You have to consider their functional and cognitive abilities, their ability to understand disease processes and make decisions for themselves,” Dr. Goel said. “Age is just one factor in the grand scheme of things.”

Visiting patients in their homes provides her with insights into how well they’re doing, including the safety of their environments and the depth of their social networks.

New York City has its peculiar demands. Heal provides Dr. Goel with a driver who chauffeurs her to her patient visits. She takes notes between stops.

“The idea is to have these patients remain in an environment where they’re comfortable, in surroundings where they’ve grown up or lived for many years,” she said. “A lot of them are in elevator buildings and they are wheelchair-bound or bed-bound and they physically can’t leave.”

She said she gets a far different view of the patient than does an office-based physician.

“When you go into their home, it’s very personal. You’re seeing what their daily environment is like, what their diet is like. You can see their food on the counter. You can see the level of hygiene,” Dr. Goel said. “You get to see their social support. Are their kids involved? Are they hoarding? Stuff that they wouldn’t just necessarily disclose but on a visit you get to see going into the home. It’s an extra layer of understanding that patient.”

Dr. Goel contrasted home care from care in a nursing home, where the patients are seen daily. On the basis of her observations, she decides whether to see her patients every month or every 3 months.

She applies this strategy to everyone from age 60 to over 100.

Pages

Recommended Reading

To predict mortality, you need a leg to stand on
MDedge Family Medicine
What is palliative care and what’s new in practicing this type of medicine?
MDedge Family Medicine
Scientists find brain mechanism behind age-related memory loss
MDedge Family Medicine
PTSD may accelerate cognitive decline over time
MDedge Family Medicine
CDC recommends high-dose flu vaccines for seniors
MDedge Family Medicine
VA foster program helps older vets manage COVID challenges
MDedge Family Medicine
ICU stays linked to a doubling of dementia risk
MDedge Family Medicine
Racism tied to cognition in middle-aged, elderly
MDedge Family Medicine
Seniors intend to receive variant-specific COVID booster in coming months
MDedge Family Medicine
Early dementia but no specialists: Reinforcements needed?
MDedge Family Medicine