Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Thursday, April 25, 2024 72° Today's Paper


Incidental Lives

Seniors face stereotypes, prejudice or discrimination because of their age when seeking medical help

ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                Ageism in health care settings is getting new attention during the coronavirus pandemic. Above, a woman gets a COVID-19 Pfizer booster shot in the “Im Laeusch” nursing home of Strasbourg, eastern France.
1/1
Swipe or click to see more

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ageism in health care settings is getting new attention during the coronavirus pandemic. Above, a woman gets a COVID-19 Pfizer booster shot in the “Im Laeusch” nursing home of Strasbourg, eastern France.

Joanne Whitney, 84, a retired associate clinical professor of pharmacy at the University of California, San Francisco, often feels devalued when interacting with health care providers.

There was the time several years ago when she told an emergency room doctor that the anti­biotic he wanted to prescribe wouldn’t counteract the kind of urinary tract infection she had.

He wouldn’t listen, even when she mentioned her professional credentials. She asked to see someone else, to no avail. “I was ignored and finally I gave up,” said Whitney, who has survived lung cancer and cancer of the urethra and depends on a special catheter to drain urine from her bladder. (An outpatient renal service later changed the prescription.)

Then, earlier this year, Whitney landed in the same emergency room, screaming in pain, with another urinary tract infection and a severe anal fissure. When she asked for Dilaudid, a powerful narcotic that had helped her before, a young physician told her, “We don’t give out opioids to people who seek them. Let’s just see what Tylenol does.”

Whitney said her pain continued unabated for eight hours.

“I think the fact I was a woman of 84, alone, was important,” she said. “When older people come in like that, they don’t get the same level of commitment to do something to rectify the situation. It’s like, ‘Oh, here’s an old person with pain. Well, that happens a lot to older people.’”

Whitney’s experiences speak to ageism in health care settings, a long-standing problem that’s getting new attention during the COVID-19 pandemic, which has killed more than half a million Americans age 65 and older.

Ageism occurs when people face stereotypes, prejudice or discrimination because of their age. The assumption that all older people are frail and helpless is a common, incorrect stereotype. Prejudice can consist of feelings such as “older people are unpleasant and difficult to deal with.” Discrimination is evident when older adults’ needs aren’t recognized and respected or when they’re treated less favorably than younger people.

In health care settings, ageism can be explicit. An example: plans for rationing medical care (“crisis standards of care”) that specify treating younger adults before older adults. Embedded in these standards that have been implemented by hospitals in Idaho, and some of those in Alaska and Montana, is a value judgment: Young peoples’ lives are worth more because they presumably have more years left to live.

Justice in Aging, a legal advocacy group, filed a civil rights complaint with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Serv­ices in September, charging that Idaho’s crisis standards of care are ageist. The group also asked for an investigation.

In other instances, ageism is implicit.

Emogene Stamper, 91, of the Bronx in New York City, was sent to an underresourced nursing home after becoming ill with COVID-19 in March. “It was like a dungeon,” she remembered, “and they didn’t lift a finger to do a thing for me.”

Stamper’s son fought to have his mother admitted to an inpatient rehabilitation hospital where she could receive intensive therapy. “When I got there, the doctor said to my son, ‘Oh, your mother is 90,’ like he was kind of surprised, and my son said, ‘You don’t know my mother. You don’t know this 90- year-old,’” Stamper told me. “That lets you know how disposable they feel you are once you become a certain age.”

At the end of the summer, when Stamper was hospitalized for an abdominal problem, a nurse and nursing assistant came to her room with papers for her to sign. “Oh, you can write!” Stamper said the nurse exclaimed loudly when she penned her signature. “They were so shocked that I was alert, it was insulting. They don’t respect you.”

Nearly 20% of Americans age 50 and older say they have experienced discrimination in health care settings, which can result in inappropriate or inadequate care, according to a 2015 report. One study estimates that the annual health cost of ageism in America, including over- and undertreatment of common medical conditions, totals $63 billion.

Nubia Escobar, 75, who emigrated from Colombia almost 50 years ago, wishes doctors would spend more time listening to older patients’ concerns. This became an urgent issue two years ago when her longtime cardiologist in New York City retired to Florida and a new physician had trouble controlling her hypertension.

Alarmed that she might faint or fall because her blood pressure was so low, Escobar sought a second opinion. That cardiologist “rushed me — he didn’t ask many questions and he didn’t listen. He was sitting there talking to and looking at my daughter,” she said.

Her daughter is Veronica Escobar, an elder-law attorney. She remembers the doctor constantly interrupting her mother. “I didn’t like how he treated her, and I could see the anger on my mother’s face,” she said. Nubia Escobar has since seen a geriatrician who concluded she was overmedicated.

The geriatrician “was patient,” Nubia Escobar said. “How can I put it? She gave me the feeling she was thinking all the time what could be better for me.”

Pat Bailey, 63, gets little of that kind of consideration in the Los Angeles County, Calif., nursing home where she’s lived for five years since having a massive stroke and several subsequent heart attacks. “When I ask questions, they treat me like I’m old and stupid and they don’t answer,” she said.

Ed Palent, 88, and his wife, Sandy, 89, of Denver similarly felt discouraged when they saw a new doctor after their long-standing physician retired. “They went for an annual checkup, and all this doctor wanted them to do was ask about how they wanted to die and get them to sign all kinds of forms,” said their daughter Shelli Bischoff, who had her parents’ permission to discuss their experiences.

“They were very upset and told him, ‘We don’t want to talk about this,’ but he wouldn’t let up. They wanted a doctor who would help them live, not figure out how they’re going to die.”

The Palents then joined another medical practice, where a young doctor barely looked at them after conducting cursory examinations, they said. That physician failed to identify a dangerous staphylococcus bacterial infection on Ed’s arm.

Now they’re with a concierge physician’s practice that has made a sustained effort to get to know them. “It’s the opposite of ageism: It’s ‘We care about you, and our job is to help you be as healthy as possible for as long as possible,’” Bischoff said. “It’s a shame this is so hard to find.”

———

Kaiser Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

By participating in online discussions you acknowledge that you have agreed to the Terms of Service. An insightful discussion of ideas and viewpoints is encouraged, but comments must be civil and in good taste, with no personal attacks. If your comments are inappropriate, you may be banned from posting. Report comments if you believe they do not follow our guidelines. Having trouble with comments? Learn more here.