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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page discussion of the health care system as it addresses the elderly patient. The number of elderly patients in our population is increasing at a phenomenal rate. Our health care system, however, does not always address the needs of those patients in the most exemplary manner. The relationship between aging, quality of health care, and even health care utilization is integrally tied to a number of societal factors. These factors include cultural differences, our perceptions regarding the elderly, and even politics and the economy. Utilizes information gleaned in an interview with an elderly patient to reiterate these concerns. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPmedAge.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
at a phenomenal rate. Our health care system, however, does not always address the needs of those patients in the most exemplary manner. The relationship between aging, quality
of health care, and even health care utilization is integrally tied to a number of societal factors. These factors include our perceptions regarding the elderly and even politics and
the economy. Indeed, one cannot explore this relationship without doing so from a socio-political perspective. Nor can one explore the concept of medical efficacy without the utilization of
this perspective. Health care systems around the world, in fact, operate on the basis of an intricate balance between social concern, economy, politics, and medical need. In the
midst of this balance we find dramatic advancements in technology and pharmacology which, while tremendously valuable from a health care perspective, put more and more drain on troubled economies.
Despite the political view of health care for the aged which seem to be radically divided into two staunchly opposed
camps, medical professionals have the ethical responsibility for caring for all patients equally, despite the differences in age which exists. There are, of course, special considerations which go into
treating the elderly. We know, for example, that the elderly often experience pain differently than do younger individuals (Larsen, 2000). Considerable evidence exists, in fact, that elderly patients
patients experiencing heart attacks for example tend to bear out the pain for a longer period of time than do younger patients prior to appearing at the hospital (Barakat, Wilkinson,
and Deaner, 1999). Although there is an observable phenomenon of silent myocardial infarctions and "painless" intraabdominal surgical procedures in older patients, there is no research to support the belief
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