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GenSilent: Addressing the Needs of the Aging Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Population

Posted by: Jerold E. Rothkoff Posted Date: Saturday, February 4, 2012 11:07

 

Many LGBT seniors find it difficult to survive in today’s health care system. GenSilent interviewed LGBT seniors and others for insights into this growing problem. In a recent publication from the Institute for Multigenerational Health, The Aging and Health Report: Disparities and Resilience among LGBT Older Adults states, “The five services and programs identified by participants as being most needed for LGBT older adults are senior housing (66 percent), transportation (62 percent), social events (62 percent), support groups (55 percent), and legal services (53 percent).

 

Our office is sponsoring a continuing education seminar for social workers and case managers on LGBT issues during our March professional seminars.  Please refer to our firm website for dates and times. 

Learn more about GenSilent's documentary on LGBT seniors.

Families need to know more about feeding tubes for elderly dementia patients

Posted by: Jerold E. Rothkoff Posted Date: Sunday, May 15, 2011 14:11

 

Despite evidence that feeding tubes do not improve survival rates or quality of life for elderly patients with advanced dementia, their frequency of use varies widely across the states. A new survey of family members finds that discussions surrounding the decision to place feeding tubes surgically are often inadequate.

Advanced dementia is a terminal illness that often affects a patient's ability to eat. In prior research, Joan Teno, professor of community health at Brown University, has documented a striking variation in feeding tube insertion rates.

To gain insight into the decision process and how it is informed by doctors, Teno and colleagues led a five-state survey regarding feeding tube insertion with family members of elderly patients who had advanced dementia. The results, published online in advance by the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, will appear in the May 13 print issue.

"Our results suggest that in these states with a high rate of feeding tube insertion we need to improve decision making so that the decision to insert a feeding tube is based on a process that elicits and respects patient's wishes," said Teno, the paper's lead author.

Among the study's key findings:

•13.7 percent of family members who said their family member received a feeding tube stated that medical providers inserted the tube without discussing it first;

•11.2 percent said they felt pressured by the physician to put in a feeding tube;

•38.2 percent believed that that physician was strongly in favor of feeding tube insertion;

•41.6 percent of the time the discussion regarding feeding tube insertion lasted less than 15 minutes;

•39.3 percent did not discuss the risks of feeding tubes.

The study sample size was 486 people in five states, mostly sons and daughters who were either the persons named in an advance directive or were the person identified as the surrogate decision maker for a patient with advanced dementia. Teno led a group of researchers from Brown, the Hebrew Senior Life Institute for Aging Research in Massachusetts, and the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in asking people to describe the communication they had with physicians surrounding whether to insert a feeding tube for their loved ones.

The five states were selected because they had especially high (Texas, Alabama, and Florida) or very low (Massachusetts and Minnesota) rates of intubation. Extrapolating the survey group to the entire population of the five states, much like public opinion polls do, the figures would represent 9,652 cases of elderly patients with eating problems while dying from advanced dementia

Some satisfaction

Despite research studies that question the value of feeding tubes, 32.9 percent of people in the survey said the feeding tube did improve quality of life for their loved ones. That was more than the 23.4 percent who said they regretted using a tube.

no cautioned against becoming complacent about the level of satisfaction family members recall, especially after dialogues that sometimes lack all elements necessary for fully informed consent.

"I watch people who make decisions that are really difficult," she said. "To continue on they have to make peace with their decisions."

Many seniors resist getting help at home

Posted by: Jerold E. Rothkoff Posted Date: Monday, September 13, 2010 13:11

        More than half of seniors resist asking for help, even from their adult children, fearing it signals a neediness that could land them in a nursing home, a new study shows. That fierce resistance is playing out in so many family squabbles — from the silent treatment to bitter turf wars between aging parents and their grown kids — that the home-care agency Home Instead Senior Care has just launched a series of online self-help videos, one of them focusing on communication. “This is a big problem for family caregivers,” says Bruce Mahony, owner of Home Instead’s Toronto office. “If seniors admit they need help, they think their independence is in question. They worry about losing control of their affairs.” Fifty-one per cent of 24,147 adult caregivers surveyed across Canada and the U.S. by Home Instead Senior Care from 2004 to 2009 say their aging relatives can be so reluctant to accept help, they fear for their safety. Some worry their elderly parents are forgetting to eat meals or take medications in a misguided bid to maintain their independence. Others are managing to hobble along with considerable help from elderly partners who are getting sick struggling to keep up appearances that all is well, elder-care experts say.

 

Please feel free to call the Elder and Disability Law Offices of Jerold E. Rothkoff if you are caring for an aging or disabled parent in order to access and gain eligibility for VA, Medicaid, or other needed benefits to help alleviate the stress and burden of providing home care. 

Source: Healthzone Canada (September 3, 2010)
Full story: http://www.healthzone.ca/health/yourhealth/agingwell/article/856361--seniors-resist-help-at-home

New I-Phone App for Caregivers

Posted by: Jerold E. Rothkoff Posted Date: Monday, May 31, 2010 14:51

It's so simple you wonder why someone didn't think of it before. A new app for the I-Phone is now available that will provide caregivers on the go information about their loved one's vital statistics as well as alerts if their loved one has fallen. It's compatible with Halo Monitoring equipment. Read more this new caregiving tool.


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