It’s About the Journey
Updated: 2011-03-31 15:26:31
Melissa Sharp is a 2010 LeadingAge Leadership Academy Fellow (formerly Leadership AAHSA) and LeadingAge invited her to blog about her experience in the program. I was at the Leadership Circle meeting in 2004 when our members identified what kept them awake at night: where would we find the next generation of aging services leaders and [...]
A large study of nursing-home residents found a significantly increased risk of death and other adverse outcomes with conventional antipsychotics, antidepressants, and benzodiazepines compared with atypical antipsychotic drugs.
: Pages Home About Videos Links Monday , March 28, 2011 Management of COPD : Lets Just Pretend Older Patients Don't Exist We have previously discussed on GeriPal how the exclusion of older persons from research has left us clueless about how to treat many of the most common conditions in older persons . see here and here and here Well here we go again . A recent article in the New England Journal of Medicine on the management of COPD is a rather stunning example of how ignoring the health needs of older persons and not incorporating even the most rudimentary principles of Geriatric Medicine make a large and expensive clinical study virtually meaningless for the majority of patients with COPD . COPD sometimes referred to as emphysema or chronic bronchitis is one of the most common diseases
Are the myths of eating too much sugar and greasy food really true or just another way to fuel the anti-acne industry?
Pharmaceutical companies create medications to only treat the symptoms of diseases, not cure them.
There doesn’t need to be a toxic oil spill in your backyard in order for your water to be poisoned.
The United States is entering a time of significant growth in Alzheimer’s Disease, according to the Alzheimer’s Association 2011 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures
15 million people provide care for someone with Alzheimer’s Disease – a 37% increase from last year.
5.4 million people have Alzheimer’s Disease.
Every 69 seconds someone new develops Alzheimer’s, which will increase to [...]
Pages Home About Videos Links Tuesday , March 15, 2011 The Past is Hard to Forget when Evaluating New Dementia Screening Tests If we care about primary care physicians actually using the screening tests we develop , then we should care about their accessibility to those clinicians . To put it simply , the more barriers we put in place , the less likely anyone will use them to assess cognitive status in the elderly . The prior gold standard for cognitive screening was the mini-mental status exam MMSE This test used to be freely available online , in books , and on pocket cards that were distributed to medical students and residents throughout the country . This all changed in March of 2001 when MiniMental , LLC the current owners of the MMSE copyright granted Psychological Assessment