UC San Diego opens new senior-focused emergency unit

Ed Note: Focusing on urgent or emergent senior care is finally starting to happen. Only three level one senior emergency rooms exist in the USA, the only one on the west coast featured here. Wouldn’t it be nice if we had such care on First Hill?

There’s no sign notifying patients that they are entering the new Gary and Mary West Senior Emergency Care Unit, but it’s immediately obvious that something has changed.

Moving from the main emergency department at UC San Diego’s Jacobs Medical Center into the corridor that leads to the new unit, there is a noticeable drop in noise level and visitors are soon greeted by a wall-sized, full-color photograph of Torrey Pines State Beach.

Walls are painted in a contrasting two-tone color scheme. The lighting is softer with a variable intensity indexed electronically to the time of day outside.

The unit’s 11 exam rooms continue the design theme with large local beach photos consuming a full wall of each single-occupant suite. In addition to beds, there are thickly-padded chairs that look like medical recliners and are capable of elevating their occupants to standing position or lowering them to take a load off.

Overall, the feel is slightly upscale, like this is the unit around the corner for the VIPs that the regular folks never get to know about.

But admission to this tucked-away wing has nothing to do with who you know.

Age is the main criteria for landing one of these rooms. Beds are reserved for those age 65 and older. Answers to a series of five questions designed to gauge likelihood memory loss, fall risk and other geriatric issues also play into who gets escorted back and who stays in the main emergency department.

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