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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page report discusses assessment of older adults in terms of a social, emotional, physical, and/or cognitive status. Accurate assessment is essential for care and treatment and must take advantage of appropriate guidelines and skills that are utilized by people trained and aware of the nuances of geriatric assessment. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWassage.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
that they are somehow being judged regarding their competency, their ideas, and their vision of themselves rather than an objective "status report" regarding what can most benefit their overall well-being.
In addition, there is also the possibility that issues such as independence and fear that independence and self-sufficiency might be lost and the individual may choose to do whatever he
or she can to convince an assessor that they are in better physical and mental state than what may actually be the truth. As a result, any person working
on a social, emotional, physical, and/or cognitive assessment of an older person must be able to follow certain procedures and evaluations in order to assure that the data they gather
about their subject is the most accurate information possible. Physical Assessment With the enormous number of senior citizens in the population today, it is important to understand that there are
numerous healthcare concerns that are unique to older people and which should be determined prior to initiating any form of medical procedure. Consider the fact that "in 1996 more than
4.5 million persons over age 65 underwent in-patient surgery" (Wertheim 61). As a result, physical assessment must include many more characteristics than an assessment done on a younger and presumably
more healthy person. For example, an older persons greater likelihood toward cardiac arrest or "cardiovascular events" must be taken into consideration prior to recommending an exercise regimen, certain pharmaceutical drugs,
or different surgical procedures (Wertheim 61). Wertheim considered two different assessment tools and their effectiveness in "helping the practitioner use clinical information to assess the risks an individual faces when
undergoing major surgery" (61). The first assessment tool Wertheim reviews are the jointly-produced American College of Cardiology (ACC) and American Heart Association (AHA) guidelines. The other tool is one
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