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I’m just thinking we all went through a major traumatic event in 2020 and the subsequent years. And I think there’s ways that geriatrics and palliative care can kind of add an additional layer to that because we’re unique in that we can draw on the expertise of an interdisciplinary team. I guess that’s an event.
As you mentioned, it was published in JAGS in 2020, and we really started from the time of inception of POLST, so in the early 1990s, up until about February 2020 was the date that we cut off. And whether tube feeding should be on there, that’s never an emergency decision. I think it was Bob Lee’s 2020 JAGS paper.
Ariel: As we all know, as geriatricians in geriatrics research, people accumulate conditions and accumulate medicines over the years. ” So feeding them little soundbites that they might be able to take off the tip sheet and use if they had the opportunity. Eric: Now, that’s fabulous.
And also, by the fall of 2020, I was pretty sure that I didn’t want to be a leader anymore. That, as you were saying, Eric, that bring me joy that I can pursue because they feed me, as well as whatever the reward system that I’m in. Namely, I actually like working in a crisis. I can make decisions quickly.
Alex Smith: And we’re delighted to welcome back Alex Lee, who’s an epidemiologist and assistant professor at UCSF in the division of geriatrics. Nadine: I think for our geriatric friends that listen to the podcast, there’s a lot of discussion about de-intensifying management as people age. Happy to be here.
Redwing: So I grew up in a pretty intellectual family, but my brother and sister were six and 10 years older than me, and they were always feeding me literature and poetry. I had planned to start doing in-person poetry sessions with cancer patients at the beginning of 2020. Eric: What do you think attracted you to it? Vincent Millay.
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