New Published Article Discusses How to Make Hospitals Age-Friendly for People with Parkinson’s

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
Age-Friendly Hospital Measure Can Improve Parkinson’s Care

NEW YORK and MIAMI, Dec. 1, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — The Parkinson’s Foundation published a new article in the December issue of The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety titled “Advancing Parkinson’s Care and Patient Safety Through CMS’s Age-Friendly Hospital Measure.” The article provides a practical pathway to operationalize the CMS’s Age-Friendly Hospital Measure, translating a nationally recognized, widely adopted framework for older adults into disease-specific action that reduces preventable harm for a high-risk population—those living with Parkinson’s disease (PD).

“As the CMS Age-Friendly Hospital Measure takes hold and our population continues to age, hospitals and health systems are embracing the Age-Friendly movement to deliver safer and better care for older adults,” said Sneha Mantri, MS, MD, FAA, Chief Medical Officer for the Parkinson’s Foundation. “The Parkinson’s Foundation seeks to harness this momentum to ensure people with PD receive the best care possible.”

PD is the second-most common neurodegenerative disease in the United States, and its prevalence is rising in step with an expanding population of older adults. Even among older adults, people with PD face disproportionate risk of preventable harm in the hospital, including deterioration of motor symptoms, increased length of stay, delirium, and mortality due to aspiration pneumonia and readmission.

CMS’s Age-Friendly Hospital Measure, which went into effect January 1, requires hospitals participating in Medicare’s Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting Program to attest to having processes that comply with the 4Ms Framework for Age-Friendly Care. Non-compliance risks a 29% reduction of a hospital’s Medicare payment update. Simultaneously, the new measure offers hospital systems an opportunity to establish or support Age-Friendly programs and invest in the quality improvement infrastructure required to enable them.

“The 4Ms define what great care looks like for older adults. The Parkinson’s Foundation Hospital Care Recommendations show clinicians how to deliver them reliably for people with PD in real hospital workflows,” said Peter Pronovost, MD, PhD, FCCM, lead author and Chief Quality and Transformation Officer at University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center. “Hospitals are seeking disease-specific playbooks to better protect and meet the complex needs of older adults. This paper offers one for PD.”

The article summarizes tactical recommendations for ensuring Age-Friendly processes protect PD patients across each of the new hospital measure’s attestation domains, including:

  • Eliciting Patient Healthcare Goals (What Matters to PD Patients)
  • Responsible Medication Management
  • Frailty Screening and Intervention
  • Social Vulnerability
  • Age-Friendly Care Leadership

To learn more about the Parkinson’s Foundation Hospital Care Initiative and its resources, such as the Parkinson’s Foundation Hospital Safety Guide, Hospital Care Recommendations, the Hospital Care Learning Collaborative and hospital care continuing education courses, visit Parkinson.org/HospitalCare.

About the Parkinson’s Foundation
The Parkinson’s Foundation makes life better for people with Parkinson’s disease by improving care and advancing research toward a cure. In everything we do, we build on the energy, experience and passion of our global Parkinson’s community. Since 1957, the Parkinson’s Foundation has invested more than $474 million in Parkinson’s research and clinical care. Connect with us on Parkinson.orgFacebookXInstagram or call 1-800-4PD-INFO (1-800-473-4636).

About Parkinson’s Disease
Affecting more than one million Americans, Parkinson’s disease is the second-most common neurodegenerative disease after Alzheimer’s and is the 14th-leading cause of death in the U.S. It is associated with a progressive loss of motor control (e.g., shaking or tremor at rest and lack of facial expression), as well as non-motor symptoms (e.g., depression and anxiety). There is no cure for Parkinson’s and nearly 90,000 new cases are diagnosed each year in the U.S.

MEDIA CONTACT:

Melissa Nobles Gonzalez

Parkinson’s Foundation

[email protected]

305.537.9134

SOURCE Parkinson’s Foundation


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