News
July 7, 2008
New program for elder care
CAMC, WVU team up to address shortage of geriatric doctors

Like a family doctor, Dr. Todd Goldberg sees people with a variety of illnesses and chronic diseases.  But Goldberg's patients all have something in common: They're 65 and older.

Goldberg, a geriatrician, treats the elderly. He's one of only 67 geriatricians in West Virginia. That's one geriatrician for every 4,100 seniors in the state - not nearly enough to serve West Virginia's growing elderly population, according to groups studying the issue. 

The gap is expected to widen in the coming years. 

Chris Dorst
Dr. Todd Goldberg examines Ruth Barton, 89, at Edgewood Summit’s geriatric unit, a training site for West Virginia University and Charleston Area Medical Center’s new geriatrics program.
"There's a dire need and shortage of geriatric-trained physicians," said Goldberg, who moved from Philadelphia to Charleston in late December.

Charleston Area Medical Center and West Virginia University's School of Medicine are teaming up in hopes of addressing the geriatrician shortage and expanding geriatrics training among other health professionals.

Goldberg was recruited to develop a new geriatric fellowship program for physicians who already have completed three-year residency programs in family practice or internal medicine.

Last week, the hospital and medical school started accepting applications for the program, which received accreditation in May.

"We want to attract people who will become certified specialists in geriatrics and provide better care for the elderly in West Virginia," said Goldberg, geriatrics program director for WVU/CAMC. "We want to produce practicing geriatricians who will become leaders in the field."

West Virginia's population has the highest median age in the nation, and ranks third for the percentage of older adults, after Florida and Pennsylvania.

By 2030, the number of adults 65 and older in the United States is expected to nearly double, with seniors making up 20 percent of the nation's population. That volume of patients threatens to overwhelm the number of physicians available to treat them.

"The need for geriatric medical care is a growing problem," Goldberg said. "It's going to grow to critical proportions with the aging of the Baby Boomers."

Geriatricians diagnose, treat and manage diseases for older adults. They often spend more time with their patients than family doctors, Goldberg said.

They also give advice and help family members. And they're skilled at solving problems specific to seniors, such as falls, incontinence, memory problems, dementia and handling multiple medications.

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