Keeping Gerontology on the Cutting Edge
The elderly population in America is quickly growing, and the demand for well-trained and proactive geriatricians is increasing on a daily basis. Clinicians working in eldercare must keep current on new and current advances across several disciplines in order to effectively treat our aging clients.
Normal aging, the promotion of healthy cognitive and emotional aging, age and sexuality, spirituality and aging, and clinical and ethical concerns surrounding death, dying, and grief are all discussed, along with suitable treatment techniques. The course focuses on aging issues, such as particular considerations in geriatric evaluation and moderate and severe neurocognitive abnormalities, as well as how professionals may effectively address the requirements of elderly clients. The course also discusses the particular ethical challenges that emerge in the setting of eldercare, such as dealing with adult children of seniors, future planning, elders at risk, safety issues and dementia care, capacity/competency, and end-of-life decision-making. After completing this two-day thorough training, you will feel more confident in interacting with your older customers.
Determine how evidence-based aging theories impact the discipline of gerontology.
Determine what “normal aging” is and how physicians can distinguish it from cognitive deterioration.
Communicate how doctors may put nutrition, exercise, and socializing studies to use to enhance the well-being of older clients.
Define how technology improvements in living settings may be used to help the elderly get support, independence, and a higher quality of life.
Analyze and synthesize evidence on the connection between spirituality, aging, and good health outcomes.
Describe how clients’ cultural backgrounds might influence end-of-life decisions and care requirements.
Determine a method for evaluating and assessing elderly clients’ cognitive performance.
Explain how physicians can distinguish between dementia kinds by knowing the symptoms of each type.
Examine how serious neurocognitive disorders-related safety issues in older persons may be recognized and managed.
Examine how aging, mortality, and grieving affect therapy approaches with clients and their families.
Communicate suitable techniques for physicians to use when dealing with ethical challenges linked to confidentiality and capability in the geriatric population.
Connect current dementia research on causes and treatments to prospective future therapeutic therapies.
THE PROMOTION OF HEALTHY AGING AND NORMAL AGING
Gerontology is a multidisciplinary field.
Typical Aging
Cognition
Sexuality Physical health Mental health
Clinical approaches to promoting healthy aging
The Importance of Midlife Socialization
Exercise\sNutrition
Gerontechnology interventions
Assisted living and aging in situ
Current technological advancements
Horizons for the future
Technology ethics, aging, and long-term planning
Spirituality
Care towards the end of life
Bereavement, death, and dying
WHEN AGEING GOES WRONG
Early detection: When aging is not as natural as it should be
Geriatric evaluation: Special factors
Cognitive\sEmotional\sFunctional
Mild neurocognitive disorders
Major neurocognitive disorders
Alzheimer’s disease (AD)
Vascular Alzheimer’s Disease
Parkinson’s Disease with Lewy Bodies
Encephalopathy caused by chronic trauma
Dementia
Clinical manifestations
Interventions based on behavior
Concerns about safety
Interventions pharmacological
Other aging diseases
Ethics, aging, and elder law are all aspects of risk management.
What clinicians should know
Seniors at risk: Clinical, ethical, and legal issues
Confidentiality
Working with the adult offspring of the elderly
Capacity/Competency
Dementia and end-of-life care in different cultures
Current dementia research: causes and treatments
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