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Testing financial capacity in older patients

Doctors need improved tools to test the capacity of elderly patients to manage their finances, University of Queensland (UQ) research shows.

Posted
by Polly Policy
<p>Doctors need improved tools to test the capacity of elderly patients to manage their finances, University of Queensland (UQ) research shows. </p>

Doctors need improved tools to test the capacity of elderly patients to manage their finances, University of Queensland (UQ) research shows.

With the wealth of older people rapidly increasing in the past 20 years, the problem of financial capacity is a growing concern for doctors working with elderly people.

UQ School of Public Health study leader, Dr Paul Gardiner, says family members often would turn to a family doctor to help decide whether an elderly patient remained capable of making sound financial decisions.

“Doctors increasingly are being asked to determine the financial capacity of elderly patients, yet they have very few guidelines to help them make a clear clinical evaluation of a patient’s financial capacity,” Dr Gardiner says.

“Older people with cognitive impairment or dementia are particularly vulnerable to diminished financial decision-making, but at exactly what point they should lose control of their own finances can be difficult to determine. It can also place doctors in a contentious position between squabbling family members.”

Financial abuse is estimated to affect more than 1% of older Australians, and is found to be the most common form of elder abuse in a recent Western Australian study.

Dr Gardiner says doctors can follow some simple steps to protect vulnerable patients by:

  • educating patients and families about the need for advance financial planning;
  • recognising signs of possible impaired financial capacity;
  • assessing financial impairment, financial abuse or both;
  • recommending interventions to help patients maintain financial independence; and
  • making timely and appropriate medical and legal referrals.

Dr Gardiner says clinicians who worked with older people should use multiple sources of information, including objective performance based testing, neuropsychiatry assessments and face to face clinical interviews with patients to ensure a correct assessment of financial capacity was made.

“The decisions that result from an assessment of capacity can have far-reaching consequences, so it is vital that appropriate guidelines and standards are developed,” Dr Gardiner says.

“This will ensure doctors and other frontline health workers are better equipped to meet the needs of elderly patients, their families and their carers.”

Dr Gardiner co-authored the paper with Professor Gerard Byrne from UQ’s School of Medicine, and Professor Nancy Pachana and Dr Leander Mitchell from UQ’s School of Psychology.

The paper, Financial capacity in older adults: a growing concern for clinicians, is published in The Medical Journal of Australia.

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