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The Challenge of Aging

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Physical pain. 30. Awareness of Dying 'Living-dying' experience. ... 5 Psychological stages: Denial. Anger. Bargaining. Depression. Acceptance. 32 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Challenge of Aging


1
The Challenge of Aging
  • Chapter 14

2
Life is Like a River
  • The flow is continuous, and you never step in
    the same place twice.

3
Generating Vitality As You Age
  • What happens As You Age?
  • Life-Enhancing MeasuresAge-Proofing.
  • Challenge Your Mind.
  • Develop Physical Fitness.
  • Eat Wisely.
  • Maintain a Healthy weight.
  • Control Drinking and Over dependence on
    Medication.
  • Dont Smoke.
  • Regular Physical Examinations to detect treatable
    disease.
  • Recognize and Reduce Stress.

4
Confronting the Changes Of Aging
  • Planning for Social Changes.
  • Changing Roles and Relationships.
  • Increased Leisure Time.
  • The Economics of Retirement.

5
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6
Adapting to Physical Changes
  • Some physical changes are inevitable.
  • Hearing Loss.
  • Vision Changes.
  • Age-related macular degeneration (AMD).
  • Presbyopia.
  • Cataracts.
  • Arthritis.
  • Osteoarthritis (OA).
  • Rheumatoid arthritis.
  • Lupus.

7
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8
Adapting to Physical Changes
  • Menopause
  • Osteoporosis

9
Handling Psychological and Mental Changes
  • Dementia.
  • Alzheimers disease.
  • Grief.
  • Depression.
  • Unresolved grief can lead to depression.

10
Aging and Life Expectancy
  • 79.4 years of life expectance for females in the
    U.S.
  • 73.6 years of life expectancy for males in the
    U.S.
  • Factors Influencing Life Expectancy.
  • Life Span.

11
Theories on Aging
  • Aging is caused by a variety of different
    processes.
  • Cellular theory.
  • Immune system theory.
  • Metabolic theory.

12
Americas Aging Minority
  • 65 or Older.
  • 35 million people, about 13 of the total
    American population in 2000.
  • Affecting the stereotypes.
  • Political attention to the growing population.
  • The Aging population is increasing
    proportionately.

13
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14
Family and Community Resources for Older Adults
  • Family Involvement in caregiving.
  • Other Living and Care Options.
  • Community Resources.
  • Centers.
  • Services.
  • Aid.
  • Management.
  • Transportation.

15
Government Aid and Policies
  • Food stamps
  • Housing subsidies
  • Social Security
  • Medicare and Medicaid

16
Why Is There Death?
  • Life span is long enough to allow reproduction
    and the linage of our species.
  • Challenges our emotions and intellectual
    security.
  • We know that everything alive eventually dies.

17
Understanding Death and Dying
  • Defining death.
  • Defined as cessation of the flow of bodily
    fluids.
  • Life-support systems.
  • Brain death.
  • Lack of receptivity and response to external
    stimuli.
  • Absence of spontaneous muscular movement and
    breathing.
  • Absence of observable reflexes.
  • Absence of brain activity.
  • Electroencephalogram (EEG).

18
Learning About Death
  • Understanding of death changes as we age.
  • Mature understanding of death.
  • Four components (Mark Speece).
  • Universality.
  • Irreversibility.
  • Nonfunctionality.
  • Causality.

19
Denying Versus Welcoming Death
  • Anxiety associated with death.
  • Many seek to avoid any thought or mention of
    death.
  • United states attitude is to death denying.

20
Planning For Death
  • Making a will.
  • Estate.
  • Testator.
  • Interstate.

21
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22
Considering Options for End-of Life Care
  • Spending your last days at home, cared for by
    relatives and friends?
  • -OR-
  • Access to the sophisticated medical technologies
    in the hospitals.
  • Home care.
  • Hospital-based palliative care.
  • Hospice programs.

23
Deciding to Prolong Life or Hasten Death
  • Modern medicine.
  • Persistent vegetative state.
  • Ethical questions about the right to die.
  • U.S. Supreme Court in 1990.
  • The right to refuse life sustaining treatment is
    constitutionally protected.

24
Deciding to Prolong Life or Hasten Death
  • Withholding or Withdrawing Treatment.
  • Passive euthanasia.
  • Assisted Suicide and Active Euthanasia.
  • Physician-assisted suicide (PAS).
  • Active euthanasia.

25
Completing an Advance Directive
  • Living will.
  • Health care proxy.
  • Surrogate.

26
Becoming an Organ Donor
  • Human body is a valuable resource.
  • Each day 60 people receive an organ transplant.
  • Each day 18 people on the waiting list die
    because not enough organs to assist.
  • Uniform Donor Card.

27
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28
Planning a Funeral or Memorial Service
  • Disposition of the body.
  • Arranging a Service.
  • Non-profit memorial society.

29
Coping With Dying
  • No one right way to live or die of a
    life-threatening illness.
  • Doctors treat diseases people suffer from
    illness.
  • Concerns with
  • Costly medical care.
  • Loss of income.
  • Repeated and lengthy hospitalization.
  • Physical pain.

30
Awareness of Dying
  • Living-dying experience.
  • Middle knowledge patients and family seek a
    balance between hope and reality.

31
The Tasks of Coping
  • On Death and Dying (Elisabeth Kubler-Ross).
  • 5 Psychological stages
  • Denial.
  • Anger.
  • Bargaining.
  • Depression.
  • Acceptance.

32
The Tasks of Coping
  • Charles Corrs primary dimensions in coping with
    dying.
  • Physical.
  • Psychological.
  • Social.
  • Spiritual.

33
Patterns of Coping
  • Defense mechanisms.
  • Coping Strategies.
  • Different strategies
  • Emotion-focused.
  • Problem-focused.
  • Meaning-based.
  • The Trajectory of dying.
  • Supporting a dying person.

34
Coping With Loss
  • Experiencing Grief.
  • Bereavement.
  • Mourning.
  • Tasks of Mourning.
  • Accepting the reality of the loss.
  • Working through the pain and grief.
  • Adjusting to a changed environment.
  • Emotionally relocating the deceased and moving
    on.
  • The Course of Grief.

35
Supporting a Grieving Person
  • Give kind and loving support.
  • Be a good listener.
  • Refrain from making judgments about the
    survivors feelings are good or bad.
  • Social support is critical.

36
Helping Children Cope With Loss
  • Children tend to cope with loss healthier
    fashion.
  • Adults must share the news with the children.
  • Natural curiosity.
  • Sudden changes in the family environment.
  • Keep the informational lines open for the childs
    questions.
  • Be Honest.

37
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