An adult dose for a pediatric patient. A missed delirium diagnosis in an 80-year-old. Age matters in every clinical decision.
Patients across the age spectrum require different approaches to assessment, communication, medication, and consent. The 4Ms Framework, Beers Criteria, and CMS age-specific care requirements provide structure for what clinicians already know: a 4-year-old and an 84-year-old are not the same patient.
Start 14-day free trialCMS Conditions of Participation and Joint Commission standards require healthcare facilities to demonstrate competency in age-specific care.
Course Details
15 minutes
Patient Care
CMS / Joint Commission
Online, self-paced
What your team will learn
- Pediatric care: how developmental stage governs assessment and communication
- Pediatric safety: pain assessment tools and weight-based dosing safeguards
- Consent for minors: when parents decide and when the minor has a voice
- The 4Ms Framework for age-friendly geriatric care (What Matters, Medication, Mentation, Mobility)
- Beers Criteria: identifying high-risk medications for older adults
- Recognizing delirium and atypical presentations in older adults
- Communication strategies across age groups
- CMS and Joint Commission age-specific care requirements
Who needs this training?
CMS and Joint Commission standards require age-specific competency for facilities serving patients across age groups. R = Required by regulation. S = Strongly recommended.
| Practice Type | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Physician Practices & Medical Groups | Recommended | All age groups seen in primary care and specialty settings |
| Dental Offices | Recommended | Pediatric and geriatric dental patients require age-adapted approaches |
| Urgent Care Centers | Recommended | Pediatric and geriatric patients common in urgent care |
| Home Health Agencies | Recommended | Geriatric focus - 4Ms Framework and Beers Criteria particularly relevant |
| Behavioral Health & SUD Treatment | Recommended | Age-adapted approaches to mental health assessment and treatment |
| Physical Therapy & Rehab Clinics | Recommended | Mobility assessment differs significantly by age group |
| Ambulatory Surgery Centers (ASCs) | Recommended | Pre/post-operative age considerations for dosing and recovery |
| Community Health Centers (FQHCs) | Recommended | Serve all age groups - CMS CoP requirements apply |
| Pharmacies | Recommended | Beers Criteria screening for geriatric prescriptions |
| Chiropractic Offices | Recommended | Pediatric and geriatric patients require adapted techniques |
| Mental Health Private Practices | Recommended | Age-adapted assessment and communication approaches |
| Telehealth Providers | Recommended | Age-adapted communication for remote assessment |
Which roles must complete this training?
All clinical staff providing direct patient care, especially those serving pediatric or geriatric populations:
- Nurses (RNs, LPNs, NPs): Core audience for age-specific assessment and medication safety
- Physicians and PAs: Prescribing decisions, delirium recognition, consent across age groups
- Medical assistants: Vital signs interpretation, pain assessment by age group
- Therapists (PT, OT, ST): Age-adapted treatment approaches and mobility assessment
- Pharmacists: Beers Criteria screening and weight-based dosing verification
Common Age-Appropriate Care training questions
What is the 4Ms Framework?
The 4Ms Framework (What Matters, Medication, Mentation, Mobility) is an evidence-based approach to age-friendly care. Developed by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, it provides a structured way to assess and address the priorities of older adults across all care settings.
What are the Beers Criteria?
The American Geriatrics Society Beers Criteria is a list of medications that are potentially inappropriate for older adults. These drugs carry higher risks (falls, confusion, bleeding, kidney damage) when used in patients 65 and older. The list is updated regularly and serves as a screening tool, not an absolute prohibition.
When can a minor consent to their own treatment?
It varies by state and situation. Generally, minors can consent to emergency care, reproductive health services, STI treatment, and mental health/substance abuse treatment in most states. Emancipated minors and mature minors may have broader consent rights. Always check your state's specific laws and document the legal basis for the minor's consent.
Train your clinical team on age-specific care that meets CMS and Joint Commission standards
15 minutes per person. Certificate on completion. Start your 14-day free trial now.
Start 14-day free trialRegulatory Disclaimer
Training requirements vary by organization type, size, state, payer mix, and accreditation. This guide reflects common federal and state requirements as of April 2026 and is not legal advice. Consult your compliance officer or legal counsel for requirements specific to your organization. State-specific content currently covers CA, TX, FL, NY, and IL. Additional states may have requirements not listed here. Last reviewed: April 2026.