long term care administration thursday, january 29, 2009 class agenda 1. class presentation 2. case...
TRANSCRIPT
Long Term Care AdministrationThursday, January 29, 2009
Class Agenda1. Class Presentation2. Case Example3. Users of Long Term Care4. Break5. Challenges for LTC Management6. Prep Time for Presentations
What a drag it is getting older…
Doctor please, some more of theseOutside the door, she took four moreWhat a drag it is getting old
Life's just much too hard today,I hear every mother sayThe pursuit of happiness just seems a boreAnd if you take more of those, you will get an overdoseNo more running for the shelter of a mother's little helperThey just helped you on your way, through your busy dying day
Rock Songs about Aging
The Gerharts
Reuniting Seniors – Closer to Home For Mary & Emery Gerhart, Adanac Park Lodge is so close to
home it is as though they are having a family reunion. For the couple who were married on August 22, 1936, 2006
marks the seventieth anniversary of their wedding. In the past 70 years Vancouver has changed dramatically. Back in 1936 Mary Gerhart recalls purchasing their home in
East Vancouver near Adanac Park for $1,200. The price was a lot of money for the Gerharts at the time, but
they managed to scrape it up. Mary created a large vegetable garden at the side of the
house and Emery got some chickens so they could have fresh eggs every day.
The Gerharts
For more than seventy years, the couple has been the best of friends, and it was with a heavy heart that Mary had to grapple with the idea that due to the effects of Emery’s dementia, she could not longer care for him at home and she reluctantly agreed to have Emery placed in a residential care facility in the Fall of 2001.
Over the years, the couple has shared many joys and many heartaches with the most difficult set back being the death of their sons Roy in 1974 and Bruce in 1997, but through it all their love and friendship remained strong.
Having to be apart for the past five years has been another of the most difficult passages of all.
The Gerharts
Mary stayed in the house during the first four years after Emery moved into Adanac Park Lodge.
It was a difficult time for her to live alone, after all she had never lived alone and since the age of 17 she had lived with Emery, the love of her life.
Living alone in the house became too much for Mary and she moved to an assisted living facility in January of 2006.
That too was hard, but she tried her best to cope.
The Gerharts
After seventy years of marriage, the Gerharts were reunited at Adanac Park Lodge.
In a written history from Audrey Raines, one of the Gerharts daughters, she expressed her many thanks and gratitude…”the family wants to thank the hard work and advocacy by a wonderful woman from the Fraser Health Authority, [the case manager] Eleanor Allan.
In addition, the family wants to thank Vancouver Coastal Health and the healthcare professionals at Adanac Park Lodge.
Because of all these people, mom and dad were reunited again.” Now in the final sunset of their lives, they are together once again - to
give comfort to one another. It is a love that has survived and flourished and an example of which
to be proud. Both daughters are very grateful that they have this chance to be
together again for their parents. This is a great example of the health care system working well with
very positive results.
Users of Long Term Care
Consumers – It does take a village Independent to care needs. Receives a service provides another Neighbours: frail elder, living next
door is a mom and a preschooler – neighbours support each other.
Community services are an extension of such neighbouring.
Retain power of decision making.
Users of Long Term Care
Clients Less independent to care needs. Use services based on a
multidimensional assessment. Formal system controls delivery of
services and care. Informal system retain control over
daily living activities.
Users of Long Term Care
Residents Lack of informal supports to be
cared for safely in the community. 24/7 supervision, care, safe, secure,
protective living environment. Ethnocultural & geographic specific. Limited control over surroundings.
User of Long Term Care
Patients Physical, mental illness, long-stay. Med. complex, heavy, tech dependent
and conditions may change over time – discharged to home of LTC Facility.
Limited choice food and clothing. Regionalization: movement of funds from
acute care to long term care and community care.
Users of Long Term Care
Needs and Expectations Based on assessed needs. Older, frailer, sicker, chronic care. Longer life = functional disability. Need to support informal caregivers Baby boomers will want larger
collective solutions to long term care services needs
Users of Long Term Care
Major Concerns Caregivers consume health care. Women caregivers, low wages, no
family support networks, friends. Substantial personal investment in
time and money. Multitude of issues impact on users
Users of Long Term Care
93-year-old former fitness instructor and physical education teacher diedin November 2006.
He helped popularize basketball in Britain. Basil "Joe“, died of pneumonia at a
hospital in England, about a week after he was injured during a fall at his home.
His Australian-born wife of 59 years, Eva, died of heart failure in 2000.
He is survived by two sons Mick and Chris
Challenges for LTC Management
Aging of the population. Shortage of LTC beds & wait lists. Mergers, conversions and closures. No new construction of facilities. Acute care hospital stays reduced. Frail, medically complex illnesses. Home and community alternatives
to institutional care.
Challenges for LTC Management
1 Projecting populations and their health status
2 Providing support for supporters3 Discovering innovation in LTC4 Working for an aging society5 Financing LTC in the future
Challenges for LTC Management
Projecting Populations and Their Health Status
1 % people at various stages of health unpredictable.
2 Cognitive impairments first than physical health problems, for some the impairments are intertwined.
Challenges for LTC Management
Projecting Populations and Their Health Status
3 Not all impairments are degenerative in progression.
4 92% 65+ females are active 85% 75+ females are active 60% 85+ females are active 50% 95+ females are active
Challenges of LTC Management
Projecting Populations and Their Health Status
5 Activity level does not drop after 956 Men are more active to the end, at
advanced age in particular. 60% 95+ men are active 50% 95+ women are active
Challenges for LTC Management
Providing Support for Supporters Family caregivers provide the most
important role. Caregivers do not have social or
recreational outlets. Challenge – create effective care
plans for both client and supporters.
Challenge for LTC Management
Discovering Innovations in LTC Single point of entry – one stop
shopping for a full range of services Case management Increase in choices & care settings. Innovation funds dedicated for pilot
and demonstration projects.
Challenges for LTC Management
Home Care Programs Core of community-based services. Demonstrate cost effectiveness. Expand services SW, OT, PT. Focus on problem-solving with
volunteers, self-help groups and professionals to show case home care – effective, satisfied customers
Challenges for LTC Management
Respite Care Evidenced caregiver recuperation Link respite to the continuum. Caregiver assessment is needed. Need to educate public about the
benefit and availability of respite care services.
Challenges of LTC Management
Alternate Care Delivery Options Home Adaptations – grab bars Flex Housing – widened hallways Garden Units – intergenerational Group Homes – Facility in a home Assisted Living – LTC alternative Supportive Housing – High end Adult Day Care – Seniors Centre +
Challenge of LTC Management
LTC Centres Challenges Accreditation – public confidence Priority admissions suitable facility Qualitative social balanced with
quantitative functional impairment Removing production line aspects Strive to improve quality of life
Challenge of LTC Management
LTC Centre Challenges Effective recruitment, caring people Help workers feel that there work is
important Develop a fair funding model Encourage recruitment of young
people into LTC
Challenges for LTC Management
Evidenced Based Classification System
MDS – Minimum Data Set RAI – Resident Assessment
Instrument RUGs- Resource Utilization Groups CIHI – Canadian Institute of Health
Information
Challenges for LTC Management
Professional Issues in LTC More autonomy, variety, career
satisfaction in community-based Emphasis curriculum on cognitive
process Management training HR & Finance Professional incentives Merge community and facility
cultures
Challenge for LTC Management
Frontline Providers of LTC Help lower paid staff feel important Respect and value non-prof. staff Create career ladders non-prof staff Create an atmosphere where staff
are motivated to treat residents as individuals like their own family and friends in an efficient manner
Challenge of LTC Management
Unions and Management Unions want assurance from
management that the overall number of positions will not be reduced and that workloads will not increase.
Nursing union has cast a suspicious eye on delegation of regulated nursing functions.
Challenge of LTC Management
Financing LTC for the Future The costs of long term care should
not come as an unpleasant surprise that causes financial distress for individuals and their families.
Long term care is a normal risk of living and growing old.
Challenges of LTC Management
Protection Against Catastrophic Costs As long as public health insurance
remains in place, there is room for both public and private long term care facilities and programs, especially with the use of assessment tools that review the needs in an impartial manner.
Challenge of LTC Management
Creating a Balance Between Informal, Home Care and Institutional LTC
1. Seniors wish to age in their home.2. Home care preserves
independence, delaying admission to LTC facility and assists in early discharge from hospital.
3. Positive attitudes toward home care
Challenge of LTC Management
Can the Continuum be Sustained? Expand cost effective home care
and adult day care programs and reduce residential beds.
Expand short stay, supportive housing, respite care & innovative LTC programs at the expense of residential beds.
Challenge of LTC Management
Can the Continuum be Sustained? Reverse the trend toward reducing
eligible contributions to RRSPs to discourage the dipping into savings before retirement.
Encourage people to save for retirement.