Aug 31 2010

California Could Be The First State To Launch Health Insurance Exchange

The Wall Street Journal reported 8/26 that the state legislature in California passed the second of two related bills 8/25 creating an online health-insurance marketplace, something which will start …

Aug 31 2010

Long-Term Care Insurance: Who Really Needs It?

Most of us secure insurance for house, car and properties, but we oftentimes overlook the most important investment for our retirement: long term care insurance. Only few people care of buying lon…

Aug 28 2010

Pressure Sores and Good Nutrition

Pressure sores are not a new thing and have been around since ancient times. There is evidence that Egyptians suffered from bed sores when their scars have been found on the mummified remains. (So…

Aug 27 2010

How to Reduce the Stress of Caring for Aging Parents - Associated Content

Taking care of your aging parents can be stressful and emotional draining. To help understand the common challenges that come with caring for aging parents and what someone can do to reduce the stress of …

Aug 27 2010

Health Care tops lobbyist spending in Richmond - Washington Post

With Obamacare being hammered out, it should come as no shock that lobbyists for managed health care were at the top of the list during this year’s General Assembly session. That’s the news from the latest batch of …

Aug 26 2010

Seeking a balance between employment and the care of an ageing parent.

Scand J Caring Sci. 2010 Aug 18;
Eldh AC, Carlsson E

Scand J Caring Sci; 2010 Seeking a balance between employment and the care of an ageing parent Rationale: A growing number of middle-aged people are engaged in informal care of their parents while employed. To provide support as employers, co-workers or staff, health care professionals need insight into the experiences of people managing these responsibilities. Aim: To elucidate the experience of providing informal care to an ageing parent while managing the responsibilities of a working life. Methods: Narrative interviews were performed with 11 persons with experience of the phenomenon. Transcribed interviews were analysed with phenomenological hermeneutics. Ethics: Informed consent was given prior to the interviews. The study was approved by a research ethics committee. Findings: Providing informal care to an ageing parent while also pursuing a working life implies seeking balance: a balance between providing support to the parent’s needs and one’s responsibilities at work. Being employed supports this balance as it provides both fulfilment and refuge. Being capable of managing both roles grants a sense of satisfaction, supporting one’s sense of balance in life. The balance can be supported by sharing the responsibility of caring for the ageing parent with others. Study limitations: Despite perceived saturation and an effort to provide for the possibility to consider internal consistency, the findings should be considered as a contribution to the understanding of the phenomenon, as experienced by individuals in their life world. Conclusions: It is essential to recognise the impact that providing care for an ageing parent may have on the lives of a growing number of people, particularly if they have employment responsibilities. Acknowledgement by others supports one’s ability to attain balance; as co-workers and managers, we can acknowledge the efforts of an informal caregiver and as health care staff recognise the valuable contribution made by people in mid-life who provide informal care for their ageing parents.

Aug 22 2010

Caring for older adults with diabetes mellitus: characteristics of carers and their prime roles and responsibilities.

Diabet Med. 2010 Sep; 27(9): 1055-9
Sinclair AJ, Armes DG, Randhawa G, Bayer AJ

Diabet. Med. 27, 1055-1059 (2010) Abstract Aims Expanding prevalence of diabetes has a major health impact on older people and the burden experienced by their informal carers. We report research which aimed to examine the burden on carers and highlight their input into diabetes care. Methods Of 98 diabetes patients aged over 59 years, 89 regularly received help with day-to-day activities or looking after from someone else and, of these, 83 carers consented to interview. Patients and carers were administered questionnaires related to the management of diabetes and personal strain (including Diabetes Knowledge Questionnaire, EuroQol, Caregiver Strain Scale and General Health Questionnaire). Results A substantial unmet need of older people with diabetes mellitus, in relation to domestic activities and diabetes care, was highlighted. Patient and carer diabetes knowledge was low. Primary carers were generally female relatives from the same household, not in paid employment. Twenty-seven carers (33%) provided >/= 35 h of care work each week. Most carers experienced a moderate level of stress, but 11 (14%) regularly felt overwhelmed. Thirty-three carers (40%) said they had never received any information on diabetes from professionals. Help most frequently wanted was advice and support in relation to accessing community services and about finances, benefits and/or allowances. Conclusions Both patient and carer diabetes education strategies are required. Instruction for carers in the basic care of patients with diabetes is also needed and should be targeted. As many as one in seven carers felt regularly overwhelmed and lacked adequate support. Finally, 26 carers (31%) were entitled to benefits which they did not claim.

Aug 17 2010

Unintentional injuries among older adults in northern Sweden - a one-year population-based study.

Scand J Caring Sci. 2010 Jul 5;
Saveman BI, Björnstig U

Scand J Caring Sci; 2010 Unintentional injuries among older adults in northern Sweden - a one-year population-based study Aim: To study the epidemiology of unintentional injuries in a population of 21 000 Swedish older adults (65+) and to compare the injury incidence with similar data collected two decades earlier. Method: This is a retrospective epidemiologic cross-sectional study based on a 1-year data set of all the 1753 registered injury events from a well-defined population. Result: The injury rate per 1000 individuals was three times higher in the 85+ age group than in the 65-74 age group. The rate was also higher in women than in men aged 75 and older. Fractures, especially on lower and upper extremities, were the most common injuries. Falls in residential care facilities caused the most serious injuries. In transport areas, pedestrian falls and bicyclist crashes were much more common than car crashes. Of the 1753 people injured, 42% were treated as inpatients for a total of 11 569 days; 86% of these days were caused by injury events in the home (57%) or in residential care facilities (29%). Our 65+ age group occupied 69% of all hospital bed-days for trauma in all ages (0-102 years). Conclusion: Over the last two decades, the injury and fracture rate per 1000 individuals has increased by 40-50%, especially in the older age groups. During this time, the nursing strategy for older adults has changed in Sweden. As a result, more people live in their homes nowadays. This increase is distressing especially when we consider the current knowledge of preventive measures. The high number and proportion (>2/3) of inpatient trauma days for these age groups are a heavy burden for the medical sector. These facts call for more effective preventive measures, especially in the home and in residential care facilities, to minimize the negative health effects and the rising health costs.

Aug 16 2010

Prevalence and antifungal drug sensitivity of non-albicans Candida in oral rinse samples of self-caring elderly.

Gerodontology. 2010 Jul 1;
Meurman JH, Pärnänen P, Seneviratne CJ, Samaranayake LP, Saarinen AM, Kari K

Gerodontology 2010; doi: 10.1111/j.1741-2358.2010.00407.x Prevalence and antifungal drug sensitivity of non-albicans Candida in oral rinse samples of self-caring elderly Aim: To assess the prevalence and antifungal drug sensitivity of non-albicans Candida (NAC) species in elderly outpatients. Materials and methods: We investigated oral rinse samples of 194 self-caring elderly population (mean age 83 years) with emphasis on background factors for harbouring NAC. Susceptibility of Candida species to antifungal drugs was determined using standard methodology. Multiple logistic regression analysis was performed taking positive NAC count as the dependent variable and a number of known Candida risk factors as independent variables. Results: Prevalence of candidal carriage of the population was 78.4%, of which 0.5% of the subjects were NAC positive. Candida dubliniensis was the most prevalent NAC species, followed by Candida glabrata and Candida parapsilosis. The NAC positive elderly were more often edentulous with dental prostheses or had fewer teeth than Candida albicans-positive or yeast-negative subjects. Dental caries slightly increased the risk for having NAC strains (odds ratio 1.08), whilst greater age appeared to lower the risk (odds ratio 0.77). Candida species were susceptible to the commonly used antifungal agents in general, but with considerable variation among species. Occasionally, some NAC exhibited lower antifungal susceptibility. Conclusion: The possibility of oral reservoirs of NAC strains which are resistant to common antifungals should be noted in elderly outpatients.

Aug 15 2010

Geriatric day hospital: opportunity or threat? A qualitative exploratory study of the referral behaviour of Belgian general practitioners.

BMC Health Serv Res. 2010; 10: 202
Vanden Bussche P, Desmyter F, Duchesnes C, Massart V, Giet D, Petermans J, Vyncke V, Ven Den Noortgate N, Willems S

BACKGROUND: In order to address the challenges of an ageing population the Belgian government decided to allocate resources to the creation of geriatric day hospitals (GDHs). Although GDHs are meant to be a strategy to support general practitioners (GPs) caring for the frail elderly, few Belgian GPs seem to refer to a GDH. This study aims to explore the barriers and facilitating factors of GPs’ referral to GDHs. METHODS: A qualitative study using focus group discussions (FGDs) was conducted. Fifteen FGDs were organized in the different Belgian regions (Flanders, Wallonia, Brussels). RESULTS: Contextual factors such as the unsatisfactory cooperation between hospital and GPs and organizational barriers such as the lack of communication on referral procedures between hospital and primary health care (PHC) were identified. Lack of basic knowledge about the concept or the local organization of GDH seemed to be a problem. Unclear task descriptions, responsibilities and activities of a GDH formed prominent points of discussion in all FGDs. Nevertheless a lot of possible advantages and disadvantages of GDHs for the patient and for the GP were mentioned. CONCLUSIONS: In the case of poor referral to GDHs, focusing on improving overall collaboration between primary and secondary health care is essential. This can be achieved by actively delivering adequate information, permanent communication and more involvement of PHC in the organization and functioning of GDHs. The absence of a transparent health care system with delineated role definitions, seems to hinder the integration of new initiatives like GDHs in the care process. Strategies to enhance referral to GDHs should use a comprehensive approach.

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