# 4Ms Interventions in Hospitalized Older Adults: What are “Act-ons” for Positive Screens?

**Authors:** Justin Lam, Susan Kwiatek, Shahidul Islam, Mark Tursi, Christian Nouryan, Philip Solomon, Maria Carney, Edith Burns

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3146 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores interventions called 'Act-ons' for hospitalized older adults who screen positive on the 4Ms framework, focusing on how these actions are applied in real-world clinical settings.

## Contribution

This is one of the first reports detailing specific 'Act-ons' for each of the 4Ms in hospitalized older adults.

## Key findings

- Mobility assessments had the highest rate of Act-ons (83.1%), followed by Medication (57.8%) and What Matters Most (60%).
- Delirium was rarely detected, suggesting a need for improved education and training in this area.
- Act-ons for three of the four Ms were consistent across different hospitals in the health system.

## Abstract

The 4Ms framework -What Matters Most (WMM)/Medication/Mentation/Mobility- facilitates addressing issues critical to care of older adults. We identified different interventions, “Act-ons”, for positive screens in hospitalized patients assessed for all 4Ms. Unique patients identified by Age-Friendly Health System (AFHS) dashboard aggregating data on adults ≥65y/o admitted to one of 8 hospitals and assessed for all 4Ms. Individual EMR manually reviewed for demographic and clinical data, and for each positive M to determine Act-ons. Admissions reviewed from July-September 2024. A total of 297 patients received all 4Ms (9.6% of 3104 admissions). Median age: 84y/o (IQR:76-90); 57% female, (85%); race: 63% White, 13% Black/AA, 12% Asian, 13% other; 85% English speaking Median LOS: 9 days (IQR:6-15). All 297 had GOC documented but 58.3% did not include WMM. Act-ons: managing team discussed with patient (60%); palliative care consult (40%). For 121 positive Medication assessments, 57.8% had Act-ons: documented reason for no change (73.6%); decrease/deprescribed (26.4%). For 297 Mobility screens, 83.1% had Act-ons: 99% PT consult; 1% RN plan. For 13 positive Mentation screens, 2 (15.4%) had Act-on: electrolytes reviewed/reported; medication side effect treated. This is one of the first reports of Act-ons for 4Ms. Mobility had most Act-ons, then Medication, WMM, lastly Mentation. Act-ons were similar for 3 of the 4Ms across different hospitals within the health system. Delirium was essentially not detected across locations, suggesting need for a root-cause analysis and further education/training. In the future, structured processes for Act-ons may help ensure patient needs are optimally met.

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761519