Aging Well : : Solutions to the Most Pressing Global Challenges of Aging.

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TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Singapore : : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited,, 2019.
©2019.
Year of Publication:2019
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (229 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • About ACCESS Health International
  • Contents
  • About the Authors
  • List of Figures
  • 1: Demographics
  • Potential Support Ratio
  • 2: Healthcare in the United States
  • United States Health Spending and Outcomes
  • Optimal Aging
  • Geriatric Workforce Shortage
  • Prevalence of Chronic Disease
  • Person-Centered Care
  • Value-Based Care
  • Alignment to Meet the Needs of the Older Population
  • 3: Long-Term Care Financing
  • Global Funding Goals
  • Barriers to Sustainable Long-Term Care Financing in the United States
  • Public Knowledge
  • Cost
  • Reimbursement Policy
  • Long-Term Care Insurance
  • Claude Thau, Thau Incorporated
  • 4: Person-Centered Long-Term Care
  • Person-Centered Long-Term Care
  • Christopher Perna, The Eden Alternative®
  • Words Make Worlds
  • Training and Outcomes of Eden Alternative Adoption
  • Rebecca Priest, St. John's
  • Small Homes
  • Care Team Empowerment
  • Staff Satisfaction
  • Uniforms
  • Those with Dementia Live in Community
  • Enabling People to Die in Their Home
  • Stakeholder Satisfaction
  • Antipsychotic Medications
  • Dr. Allen Power, Geriatrician, Advocate, and Author
  • Surplus Safety and Restraints
  • Philosophy of Segregation
  • Dedicated Staff Assignments
  • Tena M. Alonzo, Karen Mitchell, and Ivan Hilton, Beatitudes Campus
  • Sundowning
  • Comfort Matters™
  • Barriers to Person-Centered Care
  • 5: Home-Based Palliative Care and Aging in Place and Community
  • Palliative Care
  • Cost Outcomes of Palliative Care
  • Patient Engagement and End-of-Life Care
  • Dr. Diane E. Meier, The Center to Advance Palliative Care
  • Patient Priorities
  • Education and Training
  • Palliative Care at Home
  • Dr. Kristofer Smith, Northwell Health Solutions
  • Population Health
  • Challenges to Home-Based Palliative Care
  • Pending Legislation and New Payment Models.
  • Aging in Place and Community
  • Dr. Allan Teel, Full Circle America
  • Technology
  • Community Assets
  • Outcomes
  • Barriers to Uptake and Implementation of Home-Based Palliative Care
  • 6: Coordinated Primary Care
  • The Patient-Centered Medical Home
  • History
  • Dr. Erin R. Giovannetti and Dr. Michael S. Barr, National Committee for Quality Assurance
  • Characteristics
  • Outcomes
  • Recognition24
  • Dr. Erik Langhoff, James J. Peters VA Medical Center
  • Efficiency and Value-Based Care
  • Access
  • Technology
  • Barriers to Coordinated Primary Care
  • 7: Emergency Medicine and Hospital Care in the Home and Community
  • Emergency Department
  • Cost
  • Risk for Older Adults
  • Cognitive Impairment in the ED
  • Hospital
  • Hospitalizations
  • Readmission Costs
  • Risk for Older Adults
  • Cognitive Impairment in the Hospital
  • Dr. Mark Prather and Kevin Riddleberger, DispatchHealth
  • Care Coordination Across the Continuum
  • Bounceback Rates
  • Patient Satisfaction
  • Access
  • Senior Living Communities
  • Dr. Kristofer Smith, Northwell Health Solutions
  • Late Life Planning
  • Barriers to Implementation
  • Acute Care Delivery in Skilled Nursing Homes
  • Dr. Timothy Peck, XiaoSong Mu, and Garrett Gleeson, Call9
  • Why Nursing Home Residents Are Sent to the ED
  • How the Call9 Model Works
  • Follow-Up Care
  • Honoring the Care Priorities and Advanced Directives
  • Population Health Data
  • Clinical and Cost Outcomes
  • Dr. Bruce Leff, Hospital at Home
  • Cost
  • Patient Satisfaction
  • Barriers to Implementation
  • 8: Support for Those Living with Dementia and Their Caregivers
  • Caregiving
  • Dr. Mary S. Mittelman, NYU Caregiver Intervention
  • Jed A. Levine, CaringKind
  • Mission
  • Minorities and Dementia
  • The Early Stage Center
  • Workforce Training
  • Financial and Legal Planning
  • Respite
  • Palliative Care Pilot Program
  • Wandering.
  • Elizabeth Bravo Santiago, CaringKind
  • How the Program Works
  • Case Studies
  • Program Staffing
  • Davina Porock, PhD
  • Karen Love, Jackie Pinkowitz, and Lon Pinkowitz, The Dementia Action Alliance
  • Stigma
  • Brian Leblanc, Dementia Action Alliance
  • 9: Merging Health and Social Services
  • The Home Environment
  • Access to Care
  • Access to Transportation
  • Access to Food
  • Chronic Disease Self-Management
  • Medication Management
  • Function and Independence
  • Falls
  • June Simmons, Partners in Care Foundation48
  • Readmissions
  • Nursing Home Avoidance
  • Medication Review
  • Chronic Disease Self-Management and Education
  • Prevention
  • Sarah Szanton, CAPABLE62
  • Honoring the Goals of the Participant
  • Outcomes
  • Functional Improvement
  • Quality of Life and Mental Health
  • Hospitalizations and Nursing Home Placements
  • Cost
  • Looking Forward
  • 10: Purpose and Social Inclusion
  • Lifelong Learning
  • United Nations Principles for Older Persons
  • Housing
  • The Village Movement
  • Naturally Occurring Retirement Communities
  • JDC-ESHEL
  • Cohousing
  • Joani Blank, Cohousing Enthusiast and Resident
  • Shared Meals
  • Shared Decisions and Projects
  • Intergenerational Connections
  • Rebecca Priest, Administrator of Skilled Nursing, St. John's
  • Tena Alonzo, Karen Mitchell, and Ivan Hilton, Beatitudes Campus
  • Anne Doyle, Lasell Village
  • Age-Inclusive Cities
  • Stakeholder Involvement
  • Mia Oberlink, the AdvantAge Initiative
  • Ruth Finkelstein, Age Smart Employer and Exceeding Expectations Initiatives
  • Older Workers
  • Ageism
  • Lindsay Goldman, Age-Friendly NYC75
  • The Aging Economy
  • Multi-sectoral Partnerships
  • Emi Kiyota M.Arch. and Ph.D, Ibasho
  • Elder Resilience
  • Bottom-Up Design and Operation
  • Intergenerational Connections
  • Timebanking
  • Paul Tang, linkAges90
  • Lifelong Learning.
  • Intergenerational Connections
  • Upstream Health Prevention and Resilience
  • Appendix: Indicators List: Essential Elements of an Elder Friendly Community
  • Percentage of People Age 65+ Who Report Their Community Is a Good Place to Live
  • 11: Eight Lessons for Social Inclusion and High-Quality Sustainable Elder Care
  • Lesson One: The Availability of Affordable Long-Term Care Insurance Is Essential to Improve Access to Care for Older Adults
  • Lesson Two: Person-Centered Care Is a Vital Component of High Quality Care and for Older Adults
  • Lesson Three: Palliative Care and Social Support in the Home Is Essential to High-Quality Elder Care
  • Lesson Four: Coordinated Primary Healthcare Is Essential to High-Quality Elder Care
  • Lesson Five: Delivery of Acute and Hospital-Level Care in the Home and Community Can Lower Healthcare Costs and Improve Access and Well-Being for Older Adults
  • Acute Care
  • Acute and Palliative Care
  • Hospital Care
  • Lesson Six: Dementia Presents Challenges and Opportunities for High-Quality Care and Caregiver Support
  • Caregiving
  • Institutional Settings
  • "Behaviors"
  • Palliative Care
  • Stigma
  • Lesson Seven: It Is Imperative for Health Systems to Provide Both Social and Medical Supports with Preventative Interventions That Address the Social Determinants of Health
  • Prevention and Care Transitions
  • Function
  • Lesson Eight: Social Inclusion and the Opportunity to Live a Purposeful Life Are Essential to the Happiness and Well-Being of Older Adults
  • Housing
  • Age-Inclusive Cities
  • Looking Forward
  • Additional Reading
  • Index.