brad | Shared With: Everyone - May 05 2008 | medicine, geriatrics, hospice
Great article on bringing some of the lessons of hospice into the larger senior community.
Quoted: “Slow medicine,” which encourages less aggressive care at the end of life, is increasingly available in nursing homes.
(...)
Kendal begins by asking newcomers whether they want to be resuscitated or go to the hospital and under what circumstances. “They give me an amazingly puzzled look, like ‘Why wouldn’t I?’ “ said Brenda Jordan, Kendal’s second nurse practitioner.She replies with CPR survival statistics: A 2002 study, published in the journal Heart, found that fewer than 2 percent of people in their 80s and 90s who had been resuscitated for cardiac arrest at home lived for one month.
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Quoted: で、皮膚科に行きました。皮膚科の先生は一通りの診断をしてくれ、「まだ、とびひにはなってないね」と言ってくれました。それから、とっておきの話を出すようにニヤリとしながら、「実は虫に刺されなくなる食べ物があるんですよ」と切り出されました。
それが香菜なのだそうです。
「ベトナム人はあまり蚊にさされないと言われてます」
なーるーほーどー! と心の中でひざを打ちました。ほかにはセロリも効くらしいとおっしゃってました。以来うちでは、連日、香味のある食卓が続いています。
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My latest blog post...
1 FaverViewed: 3 TimesQuoted: Seattle Newcomer Examiner - I'm feeling a little homesick. No one's flipped me the bird, tried to run me over, or openly rolled their eyes at me in a while. It's not that New Yorkers are rude - they're just more familiar (you know, total strangers sharing their medical histories and major failures).
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