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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. Providing daily care for those who have lost their physical or mental capacities - and often both at the same time - is a tremendous drain on the caretaker's emotional well being. People who work with the elderly in assisted living facilities, nursing homes, daycare facilities and institutions are met with daily challenges that can frustrate, irritate and downright antagonize the caregiver; however, while being a very taxing profession day in and day out, no amount of dissatisfaction should ever equate to abuse. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCElderAbuse.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
who work with the elderly in assisted living facilities, nursing homes, daycare facilities and institutions are met with daily challenges that can frustrate, irritate and downright antagonize the caregiver; however,
while being a very taxing profession day in and day out, no amount of dissatisfaction should ever equate to abuse. "...There has to be some oversight. As for
home health care, it has never been looked at as carefully as it should be. These agencies are drawing from the same labor pool as nursing homes, and if
these aides are not properly trained and supervised, the patients in their homes are just as vulnerable to mishap as nursing home residents, if not more so" (Holder, 1995, p.
27). In todays world of elderly care, the level of abuse and neglect has reached an all-time high. The commonality of such unacceptable treatment has called for
myriad legal intervention as a means by which to re-evaluate health reform; however, such inhumane activity in assisted living facilities, nursing homes, daycare facilities and institutions continues in spite of
these measures. The most frustrating aspect of nursing home care is the fact that patients themselves are often incapable of reporting such treatment, rendering them victims in the ongoing
breakdown of Americas health care system. According to Marks (1996), there are - for example - literally hundreds of long-term nursing care facilities nationwide that maltreat patients as a
matter of course, serving to blatantly violate federal standards as they do so, which inevitably leads to extensive injury and illness. Holder (1995)
points out there is an obvious need for ongoing surveyor training, with some of the key facets involving comprehensive resident assessment and long-term care planning. Clearly, nurses want to
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