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  • Dementia and family. The role of Alzheimer cafe in reducing the burden of caregiving families
    34-46.
    Views:
    200

    In the last years, the international researches have turned towards families caring for elderly people with dementia /see the works of Zarit et al. 1985, 2005; Aneshensel et al. 1995; and Kaplan 1996/. The majority of these researchers analysed the stress burden of the caring family member and its consequences, role conflicts, and the tensions in the caregiving family (Zarit et al. 1985; Aneshensel et al. 1995; Kaplan 1996; Zarit et al. 2005). The revelation that in terms of Romania, we know nothing or almost nothing about the burden of families caring for elderly people with dementia and its effect on the primary carer, played was an important factor in the choice of topic. This is why, in a vast empirical analysis, in Transylvania, 50 interviews and questionnaire surveys were made with people caring for elderly with dementia in their own homes and 50 families whose relatives with dementia have been moved to a long-term residential home in the past 12 months from the time of the survey. Gathering data took three years (2015–2017). The research included the inquiry interview with the primary caregiver family member, in which we assessed the functional barriers and the psychosocial difficulties (Szabó 2000). The analysis of the levels of social skills was built upon this, and it unfolded the main characteristics of self-sufficiency, existing social skills, and social adaptation. This survey pointed out the everyday tasks in which the client requires help. With regard to family care, we have also analysed the independent living ability of people with dementia. These three angles offered the guidelines for the assessment of “objective burden” of the caring family member. Reviewing the distribution of caring tasks within the family is based on this, which helps us finding out who the key persons are, the ones undertaking the primary caregiving duties. For analysing the formation of roles within the family, we have devised our own criteria (Szabó–Kiss 2015). Starting from the objective burden, in regard to the “subjective burden”, we have obtained valuable indications about the emotional effect of caregiving family member. The detailed assessment of self-sufficiency through which we have analysed the measure of functional degradation of people living with dementia, was added to the devices of the analysis (Szabó 2000). The internationally approved scale of memory and behavioural problems (Zarit 1985) is connected to this, which measures the distractive attitude of the person living with dementia and its effect on the primary caregiver. The survey of the primary caregiver’s burdening is also connected (Zarit 1985), and so is the assessment of the negative and positive attitude towards the caregiving tasks (Farran et al. 1999). A six-step focus group is added to the devices of the research, in which the primary caregivers, by hearing each other’s cases and following thematic questions, open up more easily about the critical periods of caregiving and the pivotal factors of institutional placement.

  • A geriátriai readaptáció meghatározása és alkalmazási lehetőségei
    94-97
    Views:
    7

    A geriátriai readaptáció az idősgyógyászat speciális területe: a már nem rehabilitálható, de még nem is terminális állapotban lévő idős betegek önellátó képességének javítására irányuló komplex gyógykezelés. Jellemzi, hogy egyszerre több betegség változatos kombinációjával kell számolni, amely a szomatikus, mentális, spirituális és szociális szférát egyénileg különböző mértékben, de minden idős embernél egyaránt érinti. Ezt a sokoldalú, változatos klinikai megjelenést a geriátriai multimorbiditás okozza (E Irányelv, 2021/19).

  • The role of geriatric readaptation in improving the condition of the non-rehabilitable elderly
    66-72
    Views:
    128

    Rehabilitation is significantly more difficult for people over the age of 65 and suffering from multiple chronic diseases than for younger people. In case of acute events or the worsening of existing diseases, it is an important professional question to determine how suitable the patient is for rehabilitation. Based on the complex examination of diagnosis, prognosis and rehabilitation, the primary consideration for individuals who cannot be rehabilitated is to maintain their independence as long as possible, which goes hand in hand with a better quality of life. This is helped by geriatric readaptation, the widest possible introduction and application of which is crucial for the elderly.

  • The preventive geriatric – the new issue of the XXI-st Century
    49-63.
    Views:
    151

    The ageing is the global phenomenon, it is main more difficult financial and social
    problem for modern societies. If we accepted the ageing = disease identity, this does not
    help solving the problem, it increases cost only. It is still high number of people over the
    age of 65 in hospital inpatient departments. A change of view is needed. The aging is
    regarded as a decompensation process, which has parts and interventions possibilities. If
    we intervene in the downturns of the decompensation process with appropriate means,
    decompensation can be reduced; life-years in health can be increased. The goal is to
    preserve self-sufficiency as much as possible. Should be system established, because in
    other way this will be for profit service only. We have reviewed the major experiments that
    have taken place in the world and seem appropriate to handle the issue properly. However
    in order to achieve results, necessary change not only the structure bat also the attitudes.