The American Academy of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery Foundation (AAO-HNSF) has recently been awarded a significant grant through the Expanding Age-Friendly Approaches to Specialty Ambulatory Care program, an initiative supported by the Council of Medical Specialty Societies (CMSS) and The John A. Hartford Foundation. This funding marks a pivotal moment for the field of otolaryngology, as it enables the AAO-HNSF to tailor and implement age-friendly healthcare strategies specifically designed for older adults receiving outpatient specialty care.
Central to this initiative is the adaptation of the Age-Friendly Health Systems 4Ms Framework, which focuses on four core elements crucial to geriatric care: What Matters, Medication, Mentation, and Mobility. The framework’s application in otolaryngology promises to address the unique challenges faced by elderly patients, integrating evidence-based practices that prioritize patient-centered outcomes while enhancing overall quality of care. By operationalizing these principles through the AAO-HNSF’s established clinical infrastructure, this project aims to revolutionize how otolaryngologists manage age-related health issues.
The AAO-HNSF will leverage its extensive Reg-ent℠ clinical data registry as the backbone of this initiative. Reg-ent, a vast repository encompassing approximately 13 million unique patients and over 127 million clinical encounters across nearly 2,000 providers in 200 practices nationwide, offers an unprecedented opportunity to collect and analyze patient-reported data alongside clinical outcomes at scale. Through this linkage, the initiative will develop novel ENT-specific patient tools, including a pre-visit checklist tailored to detect hearing impairment, dizziness, fall risk, medication safety, and communication preferences.
Providing actionable, real-time insights, interactive provider dashboards will also be created to enable clinicians to monitor quality metrics related to the 4Ms. These dashboards are designed to integrate seamlessly into clinical workflows, minimizing additional burdens on healthcare providers while empowering them to make informed decisions that align with the individualized needs and priorities of older adults. This balance between data-driven practice and clinician usability is essential for fostering sustainable improvements in outpatient specialty care.
The clinical significance of the 4Ms within otolaryngology cannot be overstated. Hearing loss, prevalent in the elderly, is not merely an isolated sensory deficit but is epidemiologically linked to cognitive decline and dementia. Vestibular disorders contribute to balance instability and falls, which remain the leading cause of fatal and non-fatal injuries in this population. Moreover, polypharmacy—common in older patients—heightens the risk of ototoxicity, complicating auditory and vestibular health. The initiative’s comprehensive approach, therefore, addresses interconnected pathophysiological mechanisms that profoundly affect older adults’ quality of life.
To pilot the program, the AAO-HNSF has partnered with seven diverse ENT practices nationwide. These sites encompass a broad spectrum of subspecialties including general otolaryngology, otology, neurotology, and vestibular/balance care. The selection of practices prioritizes those serving relatively large older adult populations, thus ensuring that the tools and metrics developed are tested and refined in settings where they are most needed and can offer the greatest impact.
David E. Melon, MD, President of Carolina Ear, Nose & Throat – Sinus and Allergy Center, P.A., expressed strong support for the initiative, noting the intrinsic role of otolaryngologists in geriatric care. Dr. Melon emphasized that integrating age-friendly quality measures into the Reg-ent platform represents a natural evolution toward more precise, personalized healthcare. By systematically capturing data on hearing status, balance function, medication regimens, and patient-centered goals, clinicians can enhance shared decision-making, ultimately fostering tailored interventions that better meet older patients’ unique preferences and clinical profiles.
Beyond tool development and pilot testing, dissemination plays a critical role in this effort. The AAO-HNSF intends to broadly share findings through its well-established communication channels: peer-reviewed publications, podcasts, annual meetings, and educational curricula for residents. Collaboration with affiliated organizations will further amplify outreach, facilitating the adoption of age-friendly practices across the otolaryngology community and beyond. This multi-modal dissemination strategy recognizes the importance of knowledge translation in advancing healthcare innovation.
At its core, the project exemplifies the intersection of clinical geriatrics and specialty care, recognizing that optimizing outcomes for older adults requires nuanced understanding of both age-related biological changes and the complexity of specialty-specific diseases. The targeted application of the 4Ms framework within otolaryngology may serve as a model for other specialties, demonstrating how systematic quality frameworks can be customized without compromising the specificity of subspecialty practice.
The financial support from The John A. Hartford Foundation, which provided a $1.5 million grant to CMSS for this purpose, underscores the growing recognition of the need for age-friendly health systems nationally. The foundation’s commitment to enhancing care for the aging population spans efforts in serious illness, family caregiving, and health system transformation, positioning this grant as a strategic investment with the potential for long-term, system-wide impact.
Coupled with the unparalleled data infrastructure of Reg-ent, which remains the largest national clinical data registry specific to otolaryngology, this project situates the AAO-HNSF at the forefront of evidence-based, patient-centered specialty care innovation. By integrating large-scale data analytics with front-line clinical insights, the initiative promises not only to elevate care quality but also to generate new research pathways exploring the intricate relationships between ear, nose, throat disorders, and aging physiology.
In summary, the AAO-HNSF’s leadership in adapting and implementing the Age-Friendly Health Systems 4Ms Framework within outpatient otolaryngology represents a transformative advance in specialty care for older adults. Through the combination of comprehensive data registries, patient engagement tools, provider dashboards, and multi-site pilot testing, the initiative exemplifies a pragmatic, scalable model for embedding geriatric principles into specialty ambulatory care. As the population ages, such innovative frameworks will be essential to meeting the complex health needs of older adults while maintaining the highest standards of clinical excellence.
Subject of Research: Age-Friendly Healthcare Practices in Otolaryngology for Older Adults
Article Title: AAO-HNSF Advances Age-Friendly Specialty Care for Older Adults Through 4Ms Framework Adaptation
News Publication Date: Not specified in the source text
Web References:
AAO-HNS/F Official Website
Reg-ent Clinical Data Registry
Keywords: Otolaryngology, Age-Friendly Care, 4Ms Framework, Hearing Loss, Vestibular Dysfunction, Falls, Polypharmacy, Geriatrics, Clinical Data Registry, Specialty Ambulatory Care
Tags: AAO-HNSF age-friendly initiativeage-friendly care in otolaryngologyAge-Friendly Health Systems 4Ms FrameworkCouncil of Medical Specialty Societies grantevidence-based geriatric otolaryngology practicesexpanding age-friendly ambulatory caregeriatric otolaryngology healthcare strategiesimproving mobility and mentJohn A. Hartford Foundation fundingoutpatient specialty care for older adultspatient-centered geriatric care in ENTReg-ent clinical data registry otolaryngology



