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AssistedLiving Communities (no longer preferable to call them AssistedLiving Facilities, as we learned on the podcast) are…what, exactly? If you’ve seen one AssistedLiving Community you’ve seen one AssistedLiving Community. . Summary Transcript Summary. Transcript. This is Eric Widera.
Alex 01:27 We’re delighted to welcome back Tim F a rrell, who’s a geriatrician, associate chief for Age Friendly care at the University of Utah and chair of the American Geriatric Society Ethics Committee. All right, and finally we have Yael Zweig, who is a geriatric nurse practitioner at NYU. Tim, welcome back to GeriPal.
Our task is simple, we are going to be sampling each of these hot chicken wings while we ask Eric and Alex questions related to Palliative care and Geriatrics. I’m most proud that when we started the blog, there was some tension between Geriatrics and Palliative care. They’ve all been laid out for you. Anne: Right.
These realizations led Barbara to sit down and write, gone from my site, the little blue book that has changed the hospice industry. We love this book, especially me, I like to show off my copy. Hospital residential care assistedliving, nursing facilities resident. So thank you Barbara, for being here with us today.
So we’re not just in home care, we’re in hospital, we’re in laboratory, ambulatory, you know, nursing care and assistedliving centers as well. If you’re an agency who also provides pt, OT of speech pathology, registered nursing at home, geriatric management, that’s a wonderful thing.
Every member of the team, even for me, for whatever reason, that switched me from focusing on trying to be in pulmonary critical care to become actually a geriatrician, choose the geriatric fellowship. There’s a book called The 36-hour day for dementia caregivers. But if you’re in assistedliving, yes.
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