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As the population ages, the need for home and community-based care is expected to rise. This chapter discusses public and private funding sources to help older adults with dependencies in their activities of daily living stay in their homes or find alternate community residential options. It explains the basics of the Older Americans Act, Medicaid waivers, the limited Medicare support for care at home, care of special populations such as veterans, Native Americans, and Native Alaska Elders, older adults with dementia, and those with mental health challenges. Residential housing options, assisted living communities, continuing care communities, and newer models for residential support including villages and naturally occurring retirement communities are discussed. Workforce challenges in providing care to the aging population are presented as a key factor in creating successful service programs.
This chapter takes an historical perspective in describing and analyzing the first 6 months of the COVID-19 pandemic in nursing facilities in the United States. Optimal institutional infection control practices in nursing facilities in the pre-COVID-19 era are described, as are many of the challenges faced by nursing facilities in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The role of the nursing facility medical director is described within the historical context. The structure and content of medical care within the post-acute and long-term care institutional setting are presented. Resources are presented to assist clinicians practicing in nursing facilities.
This eighth edition of Dr Reichel's formative text remains the go-to guide for practicing physicians and allied health staff confronted with the unique problems of an increasing elderly population. Fully updated and revised, it provides a practical guide for all health specialists, emphasizing the clinical management of the elderly patient with simple to complex problems. Featuring four new chapters and the incorporation of geriatric emergency medicine into chapters. The book begins with a general approach to the management of older adults, followed by a review of common geriatric syndromes, and proceeding to an organ-based review of care. The final section addresses principles of care, including care in special situations, psychosocial aspects of our aging society, and organization of care. Particular emphasis is placed on cost-effective, patient-centered care, including a discussion of the Choosing Wisely campaign. A must-read for all practitioners seeking practical and relevant information in a comprehensive format.
Skilled nursing facilities are continuing to evolve in the services offered and in their role within the health care system. Nursing facilities are increasingly offering care for post-acute, short-stay patients such as those needing rehabilitation after a stroke, medical illness, or surgery. Short-term care may also include respite care and hospice-type care. Typically, over half of the long-term residents in a nursing facility suffer from dementia. The trend toward a variety of assisted living arrangements has left skilled nursing facilities with more medically complex, functionally and behaviorally impaired residents. Issues of informed consent, use of restraints, and medication prescribing and management must all be addressed at both the clinical and administrative levels. Quality improvement efforts must include regulatory and legal requirements in addition to the benchmarks set by the nursing facilities themselves.
The American nursing facility is an important community resource, a refuge of last resort for those among us whose needs exceed the capacities of our families to provide care at home. Although often feared and reviled, the American nursing home is a dynamic microcosm, a subculture within the broader community. Nursing homes reflect the values of the communities of which they are a part. The call for “culture change” within the nursing home is really a call for an examination and evolution of the parent culture that created the nursing home in the first place. If the nursing home neglects its residents, the blame in part may be placed at the feet of the community. Although a corporation may own the nursing home, it belongs to the community in a moral sense. In America today, however, we are more apt to adopt a highway than a nursing home or the nursing home resident without any family of her own.
The best nursing homes are likely to be those staffed by local men and women who take pride in their work and are respected for helping their neighbors care for family members who are infirm and disabled. They are likely to be those facilities in which: families, including children, remain actively involved in the lives of their loved ones entrusted into institutional care; organizations such as faith communities, schools, and clubs are routinely present to enrich and enhance the quality of life for the residents; and frail older people can remain spiritually alive and engaged in relationships, celebrations, and community life.
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