| 內容註: |
Preface -- PART I Background -- 1. The epidemiology of aging in surgical settings -- 2. Implications of population ageing for societies and governments -- 3. The impact of aging population on general surgical workforce needs -- 4. Aging trajectories and phenotypes -- 5. Understanding aging, frailty, and resilience -- 6. Surgical risk assessment: from chronological age to frailty status -- 7. Integrating geriatics principles into surgical care setting: a "Surgery for Frails" novel model -- 8. The role of a multidisciplinary team for shared strategies in gerosurgery -- PART II Pre-operative management -- 9. Multidimensional Prognostic Index in Surgery: a clinical perspective -- 10. Decision-making of surgical strategy in older and/or frail persons -- 11. The nurse: perioperative care and management -- 12. The nutritionist: malnutrition risk assessment and management -- 13. The importance of hydration and nutritional support -- 14. The geriatrician: from patient-centred perioperative care to geriatric syndromes management -- 15. Open surgery choice: what, why, when, and whom -- 16. Minimally invasive surgery choice: what, why, when, and whom -- 17. Geriatric Trauma -- PART III Post-operative management -- 18. The pain assessment and management -- 19. Post-operative delirium management -- 20. Fluid and Electrolyte Balance -- 21. Post-operative stress, metabolism, and catabolism -- 22. The nutritional support and recovery: the lesson learned form ERAS -- 23. The physiotherapist: The importance of early functional recovery -- 24. The early identification of post-demission setting -- 25. The role of intermediated care: what, why, when, and whom -- 26. The continuity of care: territory and general practitioner -- 27. Decision-Making at the End of Life -- 28. Living with frailty in geriatric patients: psychological stress and special needs to support emotional tension -- 29. Informed consent challenges in frail surgical patients -- 30. Bioethical Issues in Gerosurgery. |