As dementia rates increase, experts warn hospital emergency rooms are underprepared [View all]
AURORA, Ill. (AP) At her mothers home in Illinois, Tracy Balhan flips through photos of her dad, Bill Speer. In one picture, hes smiling in front of a bucket of sweating beers and wearing a blue T-shirt that reads, Pops. The man. The myth. The legend.
Balhans father died last year after struggling with dementia. During one episode late in his life, he became so agitated that he tried to exit a moving car. Balhan recalls her dad larger than life, steady and loving yelling at the top of his lungs.
His geriatric psychiatrist recommended she take him to the emergency room at Endeavor Healths Edward Hospital in the Chicago suburb of Naperville because of its connection to an inpatient behavioral care unit. She hoped it would help get him a quick referral.
But Speer spent 12 hours in the emergency room at one point restrained by staff waiting for a psych evaluation. Balhan didnt know it then, but her dads experience at the hospital is so common it has a name: ER boarding.
https://apnews.com/article/er-wait-boarding-hospital-dementia-daf48acf11631cffdaeb5de4abe3722e
As the baby boomer generation (which I'm one of) gets older there are going be more cases of dementia.