1. Geriatric nursing care involves the promotion of healthy aging and prevention, assessment, and management of physiological, pathological, psychological, economic, and social problems affecting the aging population.
2. Common conditions affecting older people include lung and cardiac deficiencies, nervous system declines, osteoporosis, trophic tissue loss, and sensory and mental declines.
3. Principles of geriatric nursing care include considering biological age over chronological age, addressing comorbidities, encouraging independence, using a multidisciplinary team approach, and gaining the active participation of patients and their families in the recovery process.
1. Geriatric nursing care involves the promotion of healthy aging and prevention, assessment, and management of physiological, pathological, psychological, economic, and social problems affecting the aging population.
2. Common conditions affecting older people include lung and cardiac deficiencies, nervous system declines, osteoporosis, trophic tissue loss, and sensory and mental declines.
3. Principles of geriatric nursing care include considering biological age over chronological age, addressing comorbidities, encouraging independence, using a multidisciplinary team approach, and gaining the active participation of patients and their families in the recovery process.
1. Geriatric nursing care involves the promotion of healthy aging and prevention, assessment, and management of physiological, pathological, psychological, economic, and social problems affecting the aging population.
2. Common conditions affecting older people include lung and cardiac deficiencies, nervous system declines, osteoporosis, trophic tissue loss, and sensory and mental declines.
3. Principles of geriatric nursing care include considering biological age over chronological age, addressing comorbidities, encouraging independence, using a multidisciplinary team approach, and gaining the active participation of patients and their families in the recovery process.
1. Geriatric nursing care involves the promotion of healthy aging and prevention, assessment, and management of physiological, pathological, psychological, economic, and social problems affecting the aging population.
2. Common conditions affecting older people include lung and cardiac deficiencies, nervous system declines, osteoporosis, trophic tissue loss, and sensory and mental declines.
3. Principles of geriatric nursing care include considering biological age over chronological age, addressing comorbidities, encouraging independence, using a multidisciplinary team approach, and gaining the active participation of patients and their families in the recovery process.
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MWANZA COLLEGE OF HEALTH AND
ALLIED SCIENSE{MWACHAS}
• MODULE NAME : APPLICATION OF NURSING PROCESS AND THEORY
• MODULE CODE :NMT 04207. • TOUTOR NAME : MADAM HURUMA. • STUDENT NAME :DONANTUS DONATUS RWIGASIRA. • TYPE OF ASSAINMENT : INDIVIDUAL ASSAINMENT Objectives 1. Define geriatric nursing care?
2. Identify common conditions affecting older people?
3. Describe principles of geriatric nursing care?
Geriatric nursing care Geriatric Nursing is a branch of nursing concerned with care of the aging population, including promotion of healthy aging as well as prevention, assessment and management of physiological, pathological, psychological, economical and sociological problems Aging is defined as a maturational process that creates the need for individual adaptation because of physical and psychological declines that occur during a lifetime Common conditions affecting older people • Lung deficiency with decreased pulmonary ventilation and increased residual volume • Cardiac deficiency decreasing the capacity of adaptation to effort • Nervous deficiency with decreased nerve conduction, prolonged reaction time and, consequently, significantly reduced speed of movements • Muscular hypertonia and loss of muscle strength . Osteoporosis with an increased risk of fractures and trophic damage of periarticular structures and with an increased risk of stretching, rupture, and limited mobility Trophicity tissue loss with increased risk of bedsores Sensorial deficiency Mental and psychological deficiency; the existence of a previous state of depression or a reactive one to illness or intellectual deterioration have a major influence on patient participation to the recovery process. Principles of Geriatric Nursing care. The first principle of geriatric recovery is primum non nocere. Some features of the elderly patients have to be known for a better implementation of the recovery therapy, the most important being: Progressively diminishing of the capacity to adapt due to the physiological involution that characterizes senescence Physiological aging is a degenerative progressive process with functional decline of all systems that must be taken into account when a recovery program is established for a condition that left infirmity, physical, mental or intellectual sequelae. Increasing individual variations Presence of the comorbidities The main functional deficits seen in the elderly that may be important limiting factors for the recovery are:- Lung deficiency with decreased pulmonary ventilation and increased residual volume Cardiac deficiency decreasing the capacity of adaptation to effort Nervous deficiency with decreased nerve conduction, prolonged reaction time and, consequently, significantly reduced speed of movements Biological age should be taken into account more than the chronological age. Also there are differences at the same person between the rate of aging of various organs and systems. There are important differences between elderly individuals, so age is a relative criterion. If the symptoms occur, a careful clinical and laboratory examination is required in order to achieve an early diagnosis and treatment of various conditions. Comorbidities impose additional functional limitations to the physiological aging decline Polipathology is present with chronic diseases, frequent complications and exacerbations that • causing rapid deterioration and prolonged convalescence by loss of physiological reserves • In addition, these chronic conditions require adaptation of the rehabilitation plan and current medication. • The presence of a disabling condition in the context of physiological decline and comorbidities can make elderly patients to become incapable of even basic autonomy (such as washing, performing daily activities, getting dressed, eating, going to the toilet). • The many dimensions of geriatric rehabilitation require a multidisciplinary care team formed by physician, physiotherapist, psychologist, rehabilitation nurse, social worker, nutritionist, optometrist, and, if necessary, orthotist or prosthetist. • The health professionals who work with geriatric patients should have a basic geriatric training, knowledge of clinical and geriatric psychology and appropriate bioethics and special human qualities • This is why the main purpose of the geriatric rehabilitation is to achieve the transition from physical dependence to physical independence with a significant improvement in the quality of life. Tactic, patience, calm and understanding. • Efficient communication between the care team and the patient and also between the team members is an important principle of geriatric rehabilitation. The practitioner must ensure that the patient understands how physical therapy can help the prognosis of his disabling condition, how to perform each exercise and he must motivate the elderly to continue the exercises for the long term. Positive and optimistic attitude improves the patient’s expectations and encourages independence because the team members can bring arguments that all should be given a chance and very frail and disabled elderly people do well. The patient must believe that small improvements are always possible, whatever the condition and the time needed. Another principle is the conscious and active participation of the patient in the recovery process. The patient and his family are in the centre of the rehabilitation team and they must be informed and consulted. Their choices, desires, preferences and expectations must be placed in the recovery program. Rehabilitation is an active hard work process done by the patient and not to him.