Geriatric Patient Services: Specialized Care for Older Adults

Older adults navigate a healthcare system that was largely designed around single-condition, acute episodes — not the layered, interconnected health picture that tends to define life after 75. Geriatric patient services address that structural mismatch directly, offering specialized frameworks for assessment, care coordination, and decision-making that account for how aging actually works. This page covers what those services include, how they're delivered, where they apply, and the clinical boundaries that separate standard adult care from true geriatric practice.

Definition and scope

Geriatric patient services encompass the clinical, social, and administrative supports tailored to adults — typically those 65 and older, with the greatest intensity of service directed toward adults 75 and above — who present with age-related complexity that general medicine is not optimally structured to manage. The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) defines geriatric care as care that addresses the intersection of multiple chronic conditions, functional decline, cognitive changes, and social determinants in a coordinated way (American Geriatrics Society).

The scope is wide by necessity. A 78-year-old presenting with a fall isn't simply a fracture case — that fall may signal polypharmacy effects, early cognitive impairment, orthostatic hypotension, or inadequate home support. Geriatric services are built to see the whole picture. That includes:

The broader landscape of patient services treats older adult care as a specialized domain with distinct quality benchmarks and regulatory considerations.

How it works

Geriatric care rarely operates through a single provider. The functional unit is a multidisciplinary team — typically including a geriatrician or geriatric-trained internist, a social worker, a pharmacist, a physical or occupational therapist, and often a nurse practitioner with geriatric training. This team structure isn't a philosophical preference; it reflects the workload. A Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment can take 90 minutes or more and generates findings that no single clinician can action alone.

The workflow usually follows this sequence:

  1. Referral or self-identification: A patient or family member flags complexity — often after a hospitalization, a fall, or noticeable cognitive change.
  2. CGA intake: The full multidimensional assessment is completed, often using validated instruments like the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) for cognition or the Timed Up and Go (TUG) test for fall risk.
  3. Care plan development: The team consolidates findings into a unified care plan that reconciles competing treatment goals.
  4. Medication reconciliation: Polypharmacy — defined clinically as the concurrent use of 5 or more medications — affects an estimated 40% of older adults in the United States (National Institute on Aging), and deprescribing is a formal component of the care plan.
  5. Ongoing coordination: Regular touchpoints, often blended between in-person visits and telehealth encounters, track functional status changes over time.

Good care coordination services and transitional care services are not optional extras in this model — they are load-bearing structures that prevent the gaps where older adults most often fall through.

Common scenarios

Three situations generate the highest volume of geriatric service engagement:

Post-hospitalization transitions. Hospital-acquired delirium occurs in 14% to 56% of hospitalized older adults, depending on the patient population and measurement criteria (Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, via NIA). Returning home or to a skilled nursing facility after an acute episode without geriatric oversight dramatically increases readmission risk.

Dementia diagnosis and management. The Alzheimer's Association estimates that 6.9 million Americans age 65 and older were living with Alzheimer's dementia in 2024 (Alzheimer's Association 2024 Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures). The diagnostic workup, caregiver support planning, and long-term coordination for this population are core geriatric functions. Advance directives and patient wishes become particularly urgent in this context, ideally documented before cognitive capacity is substantially reduced.

Polypharmacy review. An older adult with heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and osteoarthritis may be managing 8 to 12 medications from 3 different prescribers who have never cross-referenced each other's notes. Geriatric pharmacists use tools like the Beers Criteria — maintained by the AGS — to identify medications that pose elevated risk specifically in older adults (AGS Beers Criteria).

Decision boundaries

Geriatric patient services are not simply adult medicine with the volume turned up. The clearest distinction: geriatric care explicitly deprioritizes disease-specific benchmarks — an HbA1c target of under 7%, for instance — when aggressive control conflicts with functional goals or creates fall and hypoglycemia risk. Standard adult medicine often lacks the clinical framework to make that tradeoff deliberately.

The decision to involve geriatric services, versus continuing with primary care or a specialist, typically turns on three factors:

Patients and families navigating insurance coverage for geriatric assessments should be aware that Medicare covers CGA as part of the Annual Wellness Visit, and that patient financial assistance programs may help offset costs for supplemental services not fully covered under standard benefit structures.

For patients with cognitive impairment, the informed consent process requires specific adaptation — including supported decision-making frameworks and, where appropriate, surrogate decision-maker engagement — that standard clinical workflows often don't account for without geriatric guidance.

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