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UT Southwestern’s nationally ranked geriatric care receives international exemplar status

DALLAS – Nov. 1, 2022 – UT Southwestern Medical Center has received exemplar status by the Nurses Improving Care for Healthsystem Elders (NICHE) – an international designation that indicates a hospital’s commitment to achieving the highest level of geriatric care excellence.

“Taking excellent care of older adults requires coordination and teamwork across disciplines and professions, and this recognition is a testament to the leadership role our nurses have taken in this mission as well as to our team’s ongoing commitment to deliver quality care to every older adult who enters our Medical Center,” said Thomas Dalton, M.D., Associate Professor of Internal Medicine at UTSW’s Mildred Wyatt & Ivor P. Wold Center for Geriatric Care, which provides both primary geriatric medical care and specialty consultation to patients age 80 and older. “This team works day in and day out to not only implement evidence-based and person-centered practices but also to innovate and spread those practices across the UT Southwestern Health System.”

UT Southwestern is ranked as the nation’s 26th top program in geriatrics by U.S. News & World Report and has been recognized as a participant in Age-Friendly Health Systems, a movement to deliver safe, reliable, high-quality health care in every setting based on what matters most to older adults as individuals. UT Southwestern has multiple programs aimed specifically at providing patient-centric care and education for older patients and developing coordinated, multidisciplinary care plans that focus on the complete individual, including social and psychological issues as well as medical conditions.

Criteria for the NICHE designation include expanded patient-centric geriatric care services to meet the needs of older patients and their families, supporting people with disabilities, improving orthopedic surgery outcomes, identifying and managing delirium, and strengthening community engagement.

Specialty care at UT Southwestern for older adults includes:

“UT Southwestern has made significant investments in the infrastructure of supportive care needed that can not only ease travel and access burdens for seniors and elderly patients and their families, but importantly improve surgical and orthopedic outcomes, help manage comorbidities including heart, lung, and gastrointestinal issues, and address the full spectrum of neuropsychiatric care for dementia and other issues,” said Craig Rubin, M.D., Distinguished Teaching Professor and Chief of the Division of Geriatric Medicine, who holds the Seymour Eisenberg Distinguished Professorship in Geriatric Medicine, Margaret and Trammell Crow Distinguished Chair in Alzheimer’s and Geriatric Research, Walsdorf Professorship in Geriatrics Research, and the Sinor/Pritchard (Katy Sinor and Kay Pritchard) Professorship in Medical Education Honoring Donald W. Seldin, M.D. “That infrastructure has the added advantage of reducing hospitalizations and readmissions, which further helps reduce the total cost of care.”

About UT Southwestern Medical Center

UT Southwestern, one of the nation’s premier academic medical centers, integrates pioneering biomedical research with exceptional clinical care and education. The institution’s faculty has received six Nobel Prizes, and includes 24 members of the National Academy of Sciences, 18 members of the National Academy of Medicine, and 14 Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigators. The full-time faculty of more than 2,900 is responsible for groundbreaking medical advances and is committed to translating science-driven research quickly to new clinical treatments. UT Southwestern physicians provide care in more than 80 specialties to more than 100,000 hospitalized patients, more than 360,000 emergency room cases, and oversee nearly 4 million outpatient visits a year.