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What's
New in Long-Term Care?
Gerontology
Gerontologist, Negotiator, Mediator As our population achieves a longer lifespan, many families are faced with the devastating problem of how to best care for an aging family member who can no longer live alone and needs constant care. Facilities have been built throughout the country to house and care for these very needs. The quality of these facilities varies tremendously, however, and it is often extremely difficult for the family to recognize which setting and which features are most essential for their situation. Determining quality care and the setting that will offer the best possible quality of life for their loved one is fast becoming a major stressor to the American family. This is especially true for families faced with care needs and quality of life for Alzheimer's or related dementia. GERONTOLOGY Gerontologists are specifically trained to work with the
geriatric population. Through their study on human aging, they have gained a
multi-disciplinary focus and skills enabling them to make evaluations on quality
care settings and programs offered. Similarly, with their study of individuals
and family structures, gerontologists are able to advise families on the factors
involved in quality of life which enable even the most frail elderly person to
continue to get satisfaction from life. The 1990's
found care settings rapidly responding to the need for more special care units
for cognitively impaired persons. Initially, there were dedicated areas
developed in nursing homes, then the trend moved into assisted living. Today,
some facilities are totally dedicated to providing dementia care and
programming. AARP defines care managers as family advocates and states that their services vary widely. Some include: empowering the consumer and increasing the consumer's ability to: find and receive long-term care services, learn the qualifications for publicly funded services, complete the paperwork for publicly funded services, coordinate long-term care services of different agencies, and evaluate service effectiveness. Care management costs vary too. Prices range
from free, sliding scale or a range of $50 to $175 an hour for a care manager in
private practice. AARP emphasizes that consumers must assume the responsibility
of acting on their own behalf in using care management. Of particular importance
is to understand the specific services each offers and to weigh the services
with the manager's qualifications and expertise. Training in gerontology is
critical to the equation. For
specialized needs like Alzheimer's, a care manager should also offer families
expertise on how dementia care differs from normal aging and how care settings
differ in meeting these needs to ensure security, quality, and peace of mind.
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