Geria (Midterms)
Geria (Midterms)
Geria (Midterms)
Midterm Notes
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Week 7: Core Elements of Evidence-Based
Gerontological Nursing Practice
With the formalization and growth of the gerontological nursing specialty, nurses and
nursing organizations have developed informal and formal guidelines for clinical
practice. Some of these core elements include evidence-based practice and standards and
principles of gerontological nursing.
EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE
There was a time when nursing care was guided more by trial and error than sound
research and knowledge. Fortunately, that has changed, and nursing now follows a
systematic approach that uses existing research for clinical decision making – a process
known as evidence-based practice. Testing, evaluating, and using findings in the nursing
care of older adults is of such importance that it is among the ANA Standards of
Professional Gerontological Nursing Performance.
1. Standards
2. Competencies
3. Principles
Midterm Notes 1
4. Issues/Concerns
Purposes:
Health Promotion
Health Maintenance
Disease Prevention
Self-Care
They specialize in the nursing care and health needs of older adults.
They plan, manage, and implement health care to meet those needs and evaluate the
effectiveness of such care.
The primary challenge is to identify and use the strengths of older adults, and to
assist them in maximizing their independence.
They must actively involve older adults and family members in decision-making
process, which has a great impact on the everyday quality of life of the patient.
1. Provider of Care. Know the disease process, signs & symptoms, and risk factors to
provide a quality care.
4. Advocate.
5. Research Consumer. All the interventions that we are doing are evidence-based.
We also assist in research process (data collection).
Midterm Notes 2
Subjective Data - verbalized by the client (primary) or verbalized by the relative of the
client (secondary).
Collaborative - collaborate with other healthcare providers for the plan of care.
STANDARD V. IMPLEMENTATION
Prioritize interventions formulated in the planning phase.
CORE COMPETENCIES
Provide a foundation of added knowledge and skills necessary for the nurse to implement
in daily practice.
Midterm Notes 3
This was developed by the AACN and the John A. Hartford Foundation Institute for
Geriatric Nursing entitled, “OLDER ADULTS: Recommended Baccalaureate
Competencies and Curricular Guidelines for Geriatric Nursing Care.” This serves as
guide to nursing professors to prepare students to be competent to provide excellent care
to older adults.
2. Communication
3. Assessment
4. Technical Skills
ROLE DEVELOPMENT
Provider of Care.
Designer/Manager/Coordinator of Care.
Member of a Profession.
CORE KNOWLEDGE
Ethics.
Human diversity.
Global healthcare.
Recognize one’s own & others’ attitudes, values, and expectations about aging &
their impact on care of older adults & their families.
Adopt the concept of individualized care as the standard of practice with older
adults.
Midterm Notes 4
Recognize that sensation and perception in older adults are mediated by functional,
physical, cognitive, psychological, and social changes common to old age.
Incorporate into daily practice valid and reliable tool to assess the functional,
physical, cognitive, psychological, social, and spiritual status of older adults.
Assess older adults’ living environment with special awareness of the functional,
physical, cognitive, psychological, and social changes common to old age.
Analyze the effectiveness of community resources in assisting older adults and their
families to retain personal goals, maximize function, maintain independence, and
live in the least restrictive environment.
Individualize care and prevent morbidity and mortality associated with the use of
physical and chemical restraints in older adults.
Establish & follow standards of care to recognize and report elder mistreatment.
Assist older adults, families, and caregivers to understand and balance “everyday”
autonomy and safety decisions.
Apply ethical & legal principles to the complex issues that arise in care of older
adults.
Appreciate the influence of attitudes, roles, language, culture, race, religion, gender,
and lifestyle on how families and assistive personnel provide long-term care to older
adults.
Midterm Notes 5
Evaluate differing international models of geriatric care.
Evaluate the utility of the complimentary and integrative health care practices on
health promotion and symptom management for older adults.
Facilitate older adult’s active participation in all aspects of their own health care.
Involve and educate, and when appropriate, supervise family, friends, and assistive
personnel in implementing best practices for older adults.
Ensure quality of care commensurate with older adults’ vulnerability, frequency, and
intensity of care needs.
Promote the desirability of quality end-of-life care for older adults, including pain
and symptom management, as essential, desirable, and integral components of
nursing practice.
Unique data and knowledge are used in applying the nursing process to the older
population.
Older adults share similar self-care and human needs in all other human beings.
Midterm Notes 6
The focus is to minimize the loss of independence associated with illness and functional
decline.
Regular exercise and physical activity can improve health in a variety of ways:
Nursing Implications:
Motivate the elderly to have regular exercise and increase their physical
activity.
Promote the physical activity and exercise as a habit for the elderly.
NUTRITION
Eating and drinking habits have been implicated in 6 out of 10 leading cause of
death in the elderly.
Nursing Implications:
Proper Nutrition
MENTAL HEALTH
Midterm Notes 7
Physical losses.
Caregiving responsibilities.
Nursing Implications:
Life Review: Tool for preserving or enhancing the mental health of the older
adults.
Depression:
Programs that have received federal funding and foundation supports to evaluate
their effectiveness and to encourage their replication.
Health Wise: Provides information and prevention tips on 190 common health
problems.
Ornish Program for Reversing Heart Disease: Founded by Dr. Dean Ornish.
It involves enhancement of elderly nutrition.
Strong for Life Model: Exercise program for disabled and non-disabled older
adults.
SAFETY
Midterm Notes 8
Falls are the leading cause of unintentional injury death in older adults.
Postural Instability
Gait Disturbances
Decreased Proprioception
Visual/Cognitive Impairment
Polypharmacy
Instruct client to sit on the edge of the bed for 10-15 minutes before
standing up.
Tremors
Equilibrium Problems
Foot Problems
Leg Discrepancy
Illness
Nutrition
Gait Disturbances
DISEASE PREVENTION
Helps prevent functional decline.
Midterm Notes 9
1. Primary Prevention: Designed to completely prevent a disease from occurring.
QUALITY OF LIFE
How a person rates his or her life as satisfactory or not.
According to WHO (1994), an individual’s perception of his or her position in life in the
context of their culture and value system where they live in and in relation to their goals,
expectations, standards, and concerns.
Active Aging
Affects aging and the quality of life of individuals, communities, and nations.
Behavioral Determinants:
Midterm Notes 10
1. Physical Activity: contributes to muscle strength, flexibility, balance,
cardiovascular health, positive mood, and improves cognition.
3. Smoking: Single most important preventable risk factor that causes premature
death (5A’s: ask, advice, assess, assist, and arrange).
4. Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism: Elderly have the increased effects of alcohol
because of pharmacologic changes associated with aging.
RISK FACTORS:
Polypharmacy
Physical Impairments
Cognitive Limitations
Low-Literacy Patients
STRATEGY:
Promote self-efficiency.
Midterm Notes 11
Personal Determinants:
Biological
Genetic Impacts
Psychological Determinants:
Intelligence
Cognitive Capacity
Physical Determinants:
Safe Housing
Social Determinants:
Social Support
Economic Determinants:
Income
Wealth
Neighborhood Conditions
They are the conditions in which people are born, grow, work, live, and age, and
the wider set of forces and systems shaping the conditions of daily life.
Midterm Notes 12
Provides for the minimum requirements and standards to make buildings, facilities,
and utilities for public use accessible to persons with disability, including older
persons who are confined to wheelchair and those who have difficulty in walking or
climbing stairs, among others.
Known as “an act to maximize the contribution of senior citizens to nation building,
grant benefits, and special privileges and for other purposes.”
“An Act Establishing a Senior Citizens Center in all Cities and Municipalities of the
Philippines, and Appropriating Funds Therefore”
Provides for the institutionalization and enhancement of the social reform agenda by
creating the National Anti-Poverty commission (NAPC). Through its multi-
dimensional and cross-sectoral approach, NAPC provides a mechanism for older
persons to participate in policy formulation and decision-making on matters
concerning poverty alleviation.
An Act Providing For the Mandatory Philhealth Coverage for All Senior Citizens
Midterm Notes 13
Amending for the purpose, Republic act No. 7432, as amended by Republic Act No.
9994 by removing the qualification that a senior citizen has to be indigent before
being covered by PhilHealth.
All Filipinos who have turned centenarian in the current fiscal year shall be awarded
a plaque of recognition and a cash incentive by their respective city or municipal
governments in appropriate ceremonies in addition to the LETTER of
FELICITATION and centenarian gift of P 100,000.00. Aside from DSWD, other
agencies involved in the implementation of the law’s provisions are Department of
the Interior and Local Government (DILG), Department of Health (DOH), and
Commission on Filipinos Overseas (CFO).
Declares the first week of OCTOBER of every year as “ Elderly Filipino Week.”
Approved and directed the implementation of the program providing for group
homes and foster homes for neglected, abandoned, abused, detached, and poor older
persons and persons with disabilities.
This plan aims to ensure giving priority to community-based approaches which are
gender-responsive, with effective leadership and meaningful participation of senior
citizens in decision-making processes, both in the context of family and community.
It shall train community-based health workers among senior citizens and health
personnel to specialize in the geriatric care and health problems of senior citizens.
Midterm Notes 14
Older persons are at a greater risk for adverse drug events than younger persons because
of differences in the body's utilization of drugs. Persons 65 and older are prescribed the
highest proportion of medication in relation to their percentage.
May cause increased serum levels of the "free" or unbound proportion of protein-
bound drugs.
May result in toxic levels of highly bound drugs because more unbound drug is
available to produce its effects.
Long-term use of drugs that are to be used for short-term use only (e.g., histamine
blockers, short-acting benzodiazepines, oral antibiotics).
Results in increased toxicity when older persons take usual doses of "first-pass
effect" drugs because a smaller portion of these drug concentrations would be
detoxified immediately by the liver.
Midterm Notes 15
Persons 65 and older are prescribed the highest proportion of medication in relation
to their percentage.
Older person’s body use of drugs place them at greater risks for adverse drug events
than younger persons.
A person’s biological age alone is a poor predictor of how an older person will react
to a medication.
MEDICATION ERROR
Any noxious, unintended, and undesired effects of a drug which occurs at doses
in human for prophylaxis, diagnosis or therapy.
Cognitive changes
Falls
Anorexia, nausea
Midterm Notes 16
Weight changes
Any injury that results in medications used, and this includes both ADRs and
medication errors that lead to an ADR.
The use of too many wrong types of medications increases the risks of both of
an ADE and non-adherence.
Pharmacokinetic Changes
3. Hepatic Metabolism
4. Renal Excretion
Midterm Notes 17
The most important pharmacokinetic parameter that changes with
age. Although the change in renal function is extremely variable,
the majority of older adults have a decline kidney function. This
may require a decreased dose or extension of the dosing interval
for certain drugs.
Pharmacodynamic Changes
Aging may result in different responses for older adults to the same
drug concentrations at the site of action compared with those observed
in younger adult.
Drug-Food Interactions
Midterm Notes 18
The presence or absence of any food that may reduce or increase the
bioavailability of a medication, leading to unanticipated effects.
Examples:
Drug-Drug Interactions
An interaction between one drug and another can result from altered
pharmacokinetics or pharmacodynamics.
Example:
Drug-Disease Interactions
Example:
Polypharmacy
Drug-drug interactions
Errors of dosing
Prevention of Polypharmacy:
Midterm Notes 19
➢ Herbal remedies
➢ OTC medications
➢ Dietary supplements
➢ Vitamins
Antipsychotic drugs should not be used unless necessary to treat a specific condition
that is diagnosed and documented in the clinical record.
BEERS CRITERIA
Developed in 1997 and adopted in 1999 by the centers of medicare and medical
services for the regulation of medications in nursing homes.
Anxiety can be a significant problem in older persons and is often associated with
depression & dementia.
According to the Beer's list, benzodiazepines with long half-lives should be avoided
because of the likelihood of accumulation of the patient drug and its active
metabolite, resulting in increased toxicity.
Midterm Notes 20
All antidepressants are generally equally effective and typically take effect in 2 to 4
weeks.
The newer SSRIs are often considered the first choice for antidepressants in older
adults because of their lack of TCA side effects.
ANTIPSYCHOTICS
Should be prescribed only when valid and clear documentation of need exists, since
many side effects occur with use of these agents.
Wandering
Poor self-care
Restlessness
Impaired memory
Anxiety
Depression
Insomnia
Unsociability
Indifference to surroundings
Fidgeting
Nervousness
Uncooperativeness
Midterm Notes 21
Residents who use antipsychotic drugs should receive:
2. Drug holidays.
Are not to be used more than twice in a 7-day period without further assessment
unless for the purpose of titrating dosage for optimal response unless for
management of unexpected behaviors otherwise unmanageable.
CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICATIONS
The main concerns with the use of cardiovascular medications in older adults are an
increased risk of orthostatic hypotension and dehydration, especially with volume-
depleting agents and vasodilators.
ANTIMICROBIALS
NONPRESCRIPTION AGENTS
1. Hypothalamus
2. Thalamus
Midterm Notes 22
3. Limbic System
SLEEP REQUIREMENTS
Less than 4 hours or greater than 9 hours of sleep is associated with higher
morbidity.
Personal characteristics
Environmental characteristics
Home environment
Midterm Notes 23
STAGE 1: Light sleep, easily awakened.
STAGE 2: Medium deep sleep, more relaxed than stage 1, slow eye movements,
fragmentary dreams, easily awakened.
STAGE 3: Medium deep sleep, relaxed muscles, slowed pulse, decreased body
temperature, awakened with moderate stimuli.
STAGE 4: Deep sleep, restorative sleep, body movement rare, awakened with
vigorous stimuli, REM, active sleep, rapid eye movement, increased/fluctuating
pulse, blood pressure, and respirations. Dreaming occurs.
Nocturnal awakening
Daytime sleepiness
Periodic Limb Movement - sudden limb movements which will lead to awakening;
possibly caused by neurological conditions.
Behavioral problems
Traffic accidents
Memory lapses
Emotional instability
BENZODIAZEPINES
Midterm Notes 24
Benzodiazepines can exacerbate sleep apnea, suppress deep sleep, increase the
likelihood of falling, and cause increased confusion.
Weight reduction
Avoiding smoking
CPAP
Surgery
HERBAL/NATURAL REMEDIES
Melatonin
Chamomile tea
Valerian root
Midterm Notes 25
Discourage long naps.
NON-ADHERENCE (NONCOMPLIANCE)
RISK FACTORS
▪Living alone without social support.
▪ Visual or auditory impairments.
▪ Increasing use of alcohol.
▪ Socioeconomic factors.
▪ Unpalatable bulk powders or large tablets.
Encourage a client who “pharmacy shops” to have prescriptions filled at the same
pharmacy each time.
Being aware of the effects of aging on the typical signs and symptoms of medication
toxicity.
Midterm Notes 26
ETHICS OF CARE
Include compassion, equity, fairness, dignity, confidentiality, and mindfulness of a
person’s autonomy within the realm of the person’s abilities and mental capacity.
ETHICAL PRINCIPLES
1. ADVOCACY – refers to loyalty and a championing of the needs and interest of others, to
educate and informed the patients about their rights and access benefits entitled for them.
2. AUTONOMY - is the concept that each person has a right to make independent choices
and decisions.
Midterm Notes 27
9. RECIPROCITY – is a feature of integrity concerned with the ability to be true to one’s
self while respecting and supporting the values and views of another.
10. VERACITY – means truthfulness and refers to telling the truth, or at the least, not
misleading or deceiving patients or their families.
ISSUES TO BE CONCERNED
ISSUES ON CONFLICT OF INTEREST
1. Actual Conflict of Interest: issues between family members and caregivers represent
the elderly or assist them in decision-making. These include conflicts:
2. Perceived Conflicts of Interest: include those which are not actual conflicts in the
course of care but may later become conflicts when the elder patient’s interest
diverge from those who provide the care.
ISSUES ON CONFIDENTIALITY
In caring for an elderly patient, invariably, there is disclosure made by the family
and relatives regarding information that may otherwise be personal and
confidentiality to the patient alone.
▪ Patient competency
▪ Staff supervision
Midterm Notes 28
▪ Restraints
▪ Telephone orders
▪ Medications
▪ Do not resuscitate orders
▪ Advance directives and issues related to death and dying
▪ Elder abuse
Increasingly, such facilities are caring for a more medically complex population than
ever before; many nursing homes are establishing subacute care units that provide
ventilator care, hyperalimentations, and other services that were confined to hospital
settings.
Although the number of facilities providing long-term care has declined since the
implementation of tougher standarsds, the number of residents who are served in long-
term care facilities has grown along with the growth of the older people entering their
senior years, a majority will need some type of facility-based or community long-term
care, and about half of all older women and one third of all older men will spend some
time in a long –term care facility during their lives.
Consumers are well informed of the standards of good care and quality living
environments, giving them higher expectations of providers than previously. Also, for
many nurses who have become frustrated with the caregiving limitations of abbreviated
hospital stays and fragmented care, such facilities offer an opportunity to establish long-
term relationships and practice nursing’s healing arts.
Long-term care is a variety of services which help meet both the medical and non-
medical needs of people with a chronic illness or disability who cannot care for
themselves for long periods.
Midterm Notes 29
Licensed staff must be on duty around the clock, nursing assistants must complete a
certification process, the use of chemical and physical restraints has declined, and
documentation has improved. However, problems do remain.
Issues such as insufficiently and inconsistently staffing ang high staff turnover and
conditions such as pressure ulcers, dehydration, and malnutrition continue to plague this
care setting.
▪ Physician services
▪ Specialized rehabilitation services
▪ Dental services
▪ Pharmacy services
▪ Infection control
▪ Physical environment
▪ Administration
Care homes, also called residential care facilities or group homes, are small private
facilities, usually with 20 or fewer residents.
Midterm Notes 30
▪ ADMINISTRATION
▪ SPECIAL SERVICES
▪ STAFF
▪ RESIDENTS
▪ PHYSICAL FACILITY
▪ MEALS
▪ ACTIVITIES
▪ CARE
▪ FAMILY INVOLVEMENT
▪ SPIRITUAL NEEDS
Designed for older adults who are able to remain independent and active, but need a
helping hand.
PALLIATIVE CARE
It is an interdisciplinary medical caregiving approach aimed at optimizing quality of
life and mitigating suffering among people with serious, complex illness.
Midterm Notes 31
Palliative care is the active total care of clients whose diseases is not responsive to
curative treatment.
The goal of palliative care is achievement of the best possible quality of life for
clients and family. It affirms life and regards dying as a normal process.
1. Pain control
The first hospice program was St. Christophers’ Hospice in London. In the United
States, the first hospice began at Hospice, Inc. in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1974.
The National Hospice Organization has developed standards for hospice care to
guide local hospice programs; however, individuality and autonomy of each program
are encouraged.
Hospice care aids in adding quality and meaning into the remaining period of life.
The care involves interdisciplinary efforts to address physical, emotional, and
spiritualneeds, including:
pain relief
symptom control
Midterm Notes 32
Use to indicate the patient’s decisions if the time should come when they are unable
to speak for themselves.
Loss of body image, significant other, a sense of well-being, a job, personal possessions,
beliefs, a sense of self, etc.
TYPES OF LOSS
Personal Loss
Any significant loss of someone or something that can no longer be seen or felt,
heard, known or experienced & that requires individual adaptation through the
grieving process.
Perceived Loss
Loss that is less tangible & uniquely defined by the grieving client (loss of
confidence, prestige).
Subjective.
Maturational Loss
Situational Loss
Actual Loss
Midterm Notes 33
Can be identified by others & can arise either in response to or in anticipation of
a situation.
Any loss of a person or object that can no longer be felt, heard, known, or
experienced by the individual.
GRIEF
The total response to the emotional experience related to loss which is usually resolved
within 6 months to 2 years.
Permits individual to cope with the loss gradually & to accept it as part of reality; a
social process best shared & carried out with assistance of others.
May be experienced as a mental (anger, guilt, anxiety, sadness & despair); physical
(sleeping problems, difficulties in swallowing, vomiting, fatigue, headaches, dizziness,
fainting, blurred vision, skin rashes, excessive sweating, menstrual disturbance,
palpitations, chest pain, dyspnea, changes in appetite, physical problems, weight loss, or
illness); social (feelings about taking care of others in the family, seeing family or
friends, or returning to work, or emotional reaction (depression, etc.).
TYPES OF GRIEF
Abbreviated Grief
Grief which is brief but genuinely felt; lost may not have been sufficiently
important to the grieving person or may have been replaced immediately by
another, equally esteemed object.
Anticipatory Grief
Process of accomplishing part of the grief work before an actual loss; grief
response in which the person begins grieving process before an actual loss.
Dysfuntional Grief
Midterm Notes 34
(1) Unresolved Grief - extended in length and severity, bereaved may also have
difficulty expressing the grief, may deny the loss or may grief beyond expected
time; severe chronic grief reaction in which the person does not complete the
resolution stage of the grieving process within a reasonable time.
(2) Inhibited Grief – many of normal symptoms of grief are suppressed and
other effects, including somatic are experienced instead.
GRIEVING PROCESS
Sequence of affective, cognitive & physiological states through which the person
responds to and finally accepts an irretrievable loss.
Bereavement
The subjective response experienced by the surviving loved ones after the death
of a person with whom they have shared a significant relationship.
HOPE
CLOSURE
The point at which the loss has been resolved and the grieving individual can move
on with life without focusing on the loss.
SOURCES OF LOSS
1. Loss of Aspect of Self - any change the person perceives as negative in the way the
person relates to the environment is loss of self.
2. External Object - loss of inanimate object that has importance to the person (ex.
jewelry, money, etc.).
Midterm Notes 35
3. Accustomed Environment - separation from an environment and people who provide
security.
4. Loved Ones - loss of valued person or loved ones through illness, separation, divorce,
broken relationship, moving, running away, promotion at work, or death.
5. Loss of Life
Concern is not about death itself but about pain and loss of control, fear of
separation, abandonment, loneliness or mutilation.
SENSORY IMPAIRMENT
Midterm Notes 36
a. Blurred vision.
b. Impaired sense of taste & smell (hearing is the last sense to disappear.
No reflexes.
CEREBRAL DEATH
Occurs when the higher brain center, the cerebral cortex, is irreversibly destroyed.
It is believed that the cerebral cortex, which holds the capacity for thought, voluntary
action & movement, is the individual.
Stiffening of the body that occurs about 2 to 4 hours after death due to lack of
Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP),which is not synthesized because of a lack of
glycogen in the body.
Starts in the involuntary muscles (heart,bladder, etc.) then progresses to head, neck,
trunk and finally reaches the extremities.
ALGOR MORTIS
When blood circulation terminates and the hypothalamus ceases to function, body
temperature falls about 1 degree Celsius per hour until it reaches room temperature.
LIVOR MORTIS
Midterm Notes 37
The RBC breakdown, releasing hemoglobin, which discolors the surrounding
tissues.
EMBALMING
Tissues after death become soft & eventually liquefied by bacterial fermentation.
The hotter the temperature, the more rapid the change, therefore, bodies are often
stored in cool places to delay the process.
1. Placed in supine position with arms at the side, palms down, or across the abdomen
to make the body look as natural and comfortable as possible.
2. Place a small pillow or folded towel under the head to prevent discoloration from
blood pooling.
3. Gently hold eyelids close for a few seconds to make it remain close.
6. Wash any soiled body parts, dress the body in a clean gown, and cover the body up
to the shoulders with clean linen.
7. Place absorbent pads under the perineal and rectal area to collect and oozing feces or
urine.
8. Remove all jewelries and present it and any valuables to the family.
10. Allow family members to enter the room when body is prepared and never allow a
single family member to enter the room alone for emotional support.
11. Special tags containing the deceased’s name, hospital number, and name of the
attending physician are placed on the wrist and ankle and on the outside of the
shroud.
12. In the morgue, body is placed in a special cooling unit to slow decomposition.
DEATH CERTIFICATE
Made out when a person dies, usually signed by the attending physician and filed in
a local health or other government office.
Midterm Notes 38
Family is given a copy to use for legal matters.
If appropriately identified and prepared incorrectly, this can create legal problems.
DENIAL
ANGER
The client has no control over the situation and thus becomes angry in response to
this powerlessness.
BARGAINING
The anticipation of the loss through death brings about bargaining through which the
client attempts to postpone or reverse the inevitable.
DEPRESSION
When the realization comes that the loss can no longer be delayed, the client moves
to the stage of depression.
ACCEPTANCE
The final stage of acceptance may not be reached by every dying client, however,
“most dying persons eventually accept the inevitability of death, many want to talk
about their feelings with family members.”
PROMOTION OF COMFORT
Terminally Ill Client: Relief of pain is critically important, the sooner the dying client
obtains pain relief, the more energy the client can direct toward maintaining quality in
the remainder of his life.
Midterm Notes 39
Terminally Ill Client: Provide personal hygiene measures, control pain, relief respiratory
difficulties, assists with movements, nutrition, hydration and elimination, provide
measures related to sensory changes.
Attentive listening encourages client to express feelings, clarify them, and accept his
fate.
Ask the patient what he needs or what would make him more comfortable. Perhaps
this is music, special books or a visit from a certain person. Try to meet any requests
the patient has. If a request is not possible to fill, ask the patient if there is anything
else you can do as a substitute.
Arrange to help the immediate family. Perhaps the spouse could benefit from having
meals prepared and brought to him so he can be at his wife's bedside. Child care
might be needed. Reducing stress from the patient's loved ones can also reduce the
cancer victim's stress.
Offer to record messages for the patient. Some patients might wish to leave a video
message for young children, unborn grandchildren or others, which could be nothing
more than a legacy of who he is.
Be present. If your friend or loved one is afraid to die, be there for her. If you can't be
present, arrange for others to sit with her through her fear. You can only do so much
and be there so much, but your presence or the presence of another person can be
very comforting to a terminally ill cancer patient.
Incorporate things the patient likes into visits. If the patient loves flowers, bring in
fresh flowers for a visit. If the patient loves a certain cookie, bring this if it's allowed.
If the patient loves to read but no longer can, bring a book on CD for her to listen to.
Midterm Notes 40
Offer comfort and as much understanding as possible. Don't pretend to understand
what the patient is going through. You haven't died, and left loved ones so you don't
know what it is like to face certain death. Hugs and even holding a hand might bring
the patient much comfort.
It is easy to say that nurses should always follow the regulations, adhere to principles,
and do what is best for the patient.
➢ Between a caregiver’s business interests and the elder’s interests. Well-being and
quality of life.
Perceived Conflicts of Interest - which include those which are not actual conflicts
in the course of care but may later become conflicts when the elder patient’s interest
diverge from those who provide the care.
ISSUES ON CONFIDENTIALITY
In caring for an elderly patient, invariably, there is disclosure made by the family
and relatives regarding information that may otherwise be personal and
confidentiality to the patient alone.
Midterm Notes 41
The wider scope of functions, combined with higher salaries and greater status, has
increased the accountability and responsibility of nurses for the care of the patients.
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY
Artificial organs, genetic screening, new drugs, computers lasers, ultrasound, and
other innovations have increased the medical community’s ability to diagnose and
treat problems and to save lives that once would have been given no hope. However,
new problems have accompanied these advances, such as determining on whom,
when, and how this technology should be used.
Entitlement programs and services for older persons had less impact when a small
portion of the population was old, but with growing numbers of people spending
more years in old age and the increasing ratio of dependent individuals to productive
workers, society is beginning to feel burdened.
ASSISTED SUICIDE
The ANA has been clear in its objection to assisted suicide, believing instead that
nurses should provide competent, compassionate end of life care. However, although
participating in a patient’s assisted suicide is unethical and inappropriate, nurses may
care for terminally ill individuals who becomes even more complicated by the fact
that laws have been enacted (e.g. Oregon’s death with dignity Act of 1997) to allow
terminally ill persons to end their lives with lethal medications, and individuals have
the right to refuse care under self-determination directives.
Week 10:
Midterm Notes 42