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Holistic Family Health

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Title: Holistic Family Health


1
Holistic Family Health
  • Jenny Wilson
  • Wilsonj1_at_hope.ac.uk

2
Normal Abnormal Changes in Ageing
  • It is old age, rather than death, that is to be
    contrasted with life. Old age is life's parody.
  • Simone de Beauvoir

3
Are we living longer?
  • Life expectancy has continued to rise over the
    years.
  • Average expectancy if born in 1901 (47.5yrs)
  • If born in 2002, (77.5)
  • Slightly lower for males and higher for females
  • implications?

4
Does a longer life expectancy mean a healthy
longer life?
  • Healthy life expectancy HLE expected years of
    life in good or fairly good health.
  • Unfortunately, extra years lived have not
    necessarily been lived in good health.
  • People can expect to live approximately 9 years
    in poor health.

And in the end, it's not the years in your life
that count. It's the life in your years. Abraham
Lincoln
5
Consequences of ageing
Think of an elderly person. In what ways is that
person different from someone who is younger?
6
What changes occur as we Age?
  • Physical changes
  • Psychological changes
  • Social changes
  • How do these changes impact on the individual and
    the family?
  • How can we age healthily?

7
What do we mean by the term Old?
  • Ageing fundamental part of human life. We age
    from conception to death.
  • Inevitable process affects biological, social and
    psychological aspects of the individual.
  • Despite the ubiquity of the term, its definition
    is fraught with ambiguity. few researchers
    using the term aging define what they mean by
    it. (Birren Cunningham, 1985 p.5)
  • In society term old applied at many ages,
    depending on job, diversity, legal requirements
    and personal attitudes.
  • In scientific research tend to site 60 years as
    old but this is arbitrary.
  • The important issue about ageing is not the
    age, but how we accept and prepare for these
    life changes.

8
Physical changes The Senses
  • Sensory changes do not occur at the same age for
    each person, nor do all changes occur at the same
    time and at the same degree.
  • Studies have shown changes accelerating at these
    approximate age ranges
  • Visionmid 50s
  • Hearingmid 40s
  • Touchmid 50s
  • Tastemid 60s
  • Smellmid 70s

9
Vision
  • Eye shape changes
  • Lens and cornea less transparent
  • Field of vision changes
  • loss of clarity, focus, problems seeing in low
    light levels, problems with colour intensities
    judging distances

How might changes in vision affect everyday
living?
10
TOUCH
  • The sense of touch also includes awareness of
    vibrations and pain.
  • The skin, muscles, tendons, joints, and internal
    organs have receptors that detect touch,
    temperature, or pain.
  • Touch decreases as we age. Skin loses
    sensitivity.
  • Touch is beneficial to wellbeing.

How might loss of touch hamper daily life? How
would getting a pet help?
11
Taste Smell
  • Taste and smell closely interact.
  • Smell begins at nerve receptors high in nose
    membranes.
  • We have about 9000 tastebuds.
  • Tastebuds decrease in number around about age 60
    size (atrophy)
  • Loss of saliva
  • Loss of smell conflicting evidence.
    (environmental factors rather than age)

What the physical dangers of loss of smell
taste? What social problems might occur?
Wellbeing?
12
Hearing
  • Ear structures deteriorate.
  • The eardrum often thickens and loses elasticity
  • Decreased ability to hear high frequencies.
  • Background noises from TV or radio difficult to
    filter out, problems with normal conversation

Consider how hearing loss affects social
interaction and psychological wellbeing
13
Physiological Changes
  • Aerobic capacity decreases 10 per decade.
  • Pulmonary function decreases.
  • Maximal cardiac output decreases.
  • Muscular strength is reduced.
  • Substantial loss of muscle mass.
  • Movement time and reaction time decrease.
  • Bone mass decreases.
  • Body fat increases

14
Psychological Changes
  • Changes in Cognition
  • Memory
  • Language
  • Reasoning Judgment problem solving
  • Changes in Emotional state

15
Cognition and Everyday life
  • Cognitive processes are essential for successful
    independent living
  • Age related decline in a number of cognitive
    processes
  • What are the implications for everyday behaviour?
  • How might failure in cognition impact upon family
    and social relationships?

16
Dementia. How common is it?
  • Demographics
  • Dementia currently affects over 750,000 people in
    the UK
  • 18,500 people with dementia are aged under 65
    years
  • Dementia affects one person in 20 aged over 65
    years and one person in five over 80 years of age

Briefly consider the wider social consequences of
these figures. What impact this might have on
social services.
17
Alzheimers Disease
  • Single most common cause of dementia is
    Alzheimers disease
  • Can occur from age of 45
  • typically an age-associated disease,
  • Prevalence up to the age of 65 years, only 1
    person in 1000 is affected.
  • This figure increases sharply to 1 in 20 over
    the age of 65.
  • 1 in 5 over the age of 80 years

18
Stages of Alzheimers Disease
  • Forgetfulness
  • - misplacing objects
  • Early confusion
  • - performance declines
  • Late confusion - confabulation, judgment
    declines, withdrawal

19
Stages of Alzheimers disease
  • Early dementia
  • - forget familiar names, disorientated
  • Middle dementia
  • - forget childrens names. Most cognitive
    abilities decline
  • Late dementia
  • - lose verbal abilities
  • Ability to care for self

20
What it feels like to have Alzheimers
  • 'To me, it's like knitting with a knotted ball of
    wool. Every now and again I come to a knot. I try
    to unravel it but can't, so I knit the knot in.
    As time goes by, there are more knots.' 

21
Caring for someone with dementia
  • In view of increasing life expectancy, and
    associated increased prevalence of dementia,
    consider the issues (physical, social
    emotional) a care giver must deal with
  • Who will care? Family member? Spouse? Child?
  • Demands on Time
  • Space
  • Finance
  • Psychological Stress
  • Physical stress
  • 7. The decision to place a parent in residential
    care

22
Why Care? What Motivates Carers?
  • Psychological Bonding
  • Blood is thicker than water. Our Fundamental
    psychological attachments involve close loving
    relationships between family members e.g.parent
    and child, husband and wife. From this we develop
    sense of self and duty.
  • Societal Norms
  • Moral, ethical religious norms influence and
    regulate relations between generations.
  • Reciprocity
  • Give and take frail elderly parents have given
    care and assistance to children in past.
    Expectation that care will be returned.

23
Who Cares?
  • Just over half of carers in the UK are spouses
  • About one third of carers are children.
  • The majority are women.
  • A third of carers surveyed were aged between 51
    and 60.
  • The average age of the person with Alzheimer's
    disease receiving care was 77.

24
Cost of caring
  • Carers save the government 34bn a year,
  • More carers of Alzheimer's disease sufferers have
    to give up work in the UK than other countries.
  • Unpaid carers deliver most of the care to people
    with dementia in the UK.
  • Younger carers who give up work at risk of
    further financial disadvantage, as their time out
    of the labour force while caring, makes them less
    attractive to employers.

25
Cost of caring
  • Higher levels of stress and depression among
    carers.
  • Half of carers now suffer from chronic fatigue.
  • Almost one third report back problems

26
Managing Guilt
  • Feelings of Guilt are very common for carers
  • Consider what factors might lead to guilt
    examples include
  • Making mistakes
  • Unpleasant thoughts/resentment
  • Feeling of anger
  • Dealing with conflicting demands
  • What do/can we do as a society to reduce these
    problems?
  • Respite care
  • Counselling
  • Financial support

27
Thoughts from carers
  • I have always felt that my responsibility to my
    parents was to ensure they were well cared for -
    but that it was not necessarily me who should
    undertake the practical aspects of caring. I have
    never agreed with the assumption that a single
    daughter should give up her career to look after
    aged parents. This may appear selfish but, in
    fact, I have my mother's best interests at heart.
    I would feel frustrated, irritated, trapped, lack
    patience and rapidly lose my sense of humour. I
    do not have any family with whom to share the
    caring as my brother and father have died ....
  • My role is to be vigilant about ensuring the
    standard of my mother's care remains high and
    appropriate to her needs. I visit each week and
    we go for walks, visit the cathedral or listen to
    her favourite music. They all bring her a kind of
    peace and tranquility.
  • When I leave I know she will be well cared for
    and safe.

28
  • Today I wept for my mother for the first time
    since she died six years ago. The catalyst for
    this surprising rush of grief was opening her
    sewing box - something I had not done since I
    brought it from her empty house and stuffed it at
    the back of a cupboard.
  • ... She had this box for as long as I can
    remember, and opening it today took me back to
    the years before Alzheimer's disease claimed her
    life and mine, too.
  • ... The practicalities of balancing life were so
    great that I couldn't give the emotional support
    and demonstrative love she craved. I was never
    cruel but, to protect my sanity, I became
    emotionally detached. She longed for comfort but
    I was on the edge myself and couldn't give it.
    This is my major regret.
  • She died in her sleep on Tuesday night. I
    discovered her body the next morning. The shock
    was intense because I had expected a gradual
    deterioration probably resulting in admission to
    a home ... My overriding feeling was one of
    relief that it was over and the knowledge that I
    had managed to see it through ...
  • ... Crying for your mother six years after her
    death is cathartic. I recognise that I failed
    her. Not in a practical sense but in an emotional
    one and I hope that, wherever she is, she knows
    that I finally recognise this and that I'm sorry.

29
Conclusion
  • Although a variety of mental health problems are
    associated with ageing, they are deemed abnormal
    not everyone will develop dementia, Many
    individuals retain a level of mental health well
    into old age.
  • Successful ageing is a combination of biological
    factors (health) psychological (good coping
    strategies) and social (support, economic)
    factors.
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