Vancouver Sun

IT’S TIME TO REIMAGINE THE AGING JOURNEY

Without reforms, seniors will remain in an untenable situation, Dan Levitt writes.

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I want to share with you my biggest fear. It keeps me awake at night. It is something that I have not written about, until now. I have gerontopho­bia. I am afraid of getting old. I fear that I will lose my memory, my physical strength and no longer be able to live independen­tly. I dread the weight I will place on my family to care for me at home. I fear most that I will be forced to leave my home in the neighbourh­ood where I have lived all my life and have no choice but to live in an old age institutio­n. I am scared that I will have to wait too long for admission to that nursing home, because not enough new residentia­l care facilities will have been built, that the nursing home I move into will be chosen by the government not by me as a consumer as this basic right is not afforded to seniors who meet the eligibilit­y criteria for residentia­l care. While I am waiting placement, the limited hours of home care I receive will support only my medical needs and my physical, social, emotional, and spiritual needs will go unmet while my world collapses around me as I begin to be treated as a non-person. People will talk around me and not involve me in their blurry conversati­ons about my ailing condition, my prognosis, which I no longer completely comprehend. I will become a domesticat­ed patient living in my house that has become unrecogniz­able to me.

Once I am placed into a nursing home, I will spend most of time in my bedroom watching television. When I press the nurse call button I will have to wait too long for help and be neglected leaving me in soiled incontinen­ce pads resulting in me developing painful pressure ulcers. I may be the subject of resident-on-resident violence. I may be given antipsycho­tic medication­s for a psychiatri­c illness that has not been diagnosed. I will lose connection to my family and friends who will visit infrequent­ly.

I will lose weight appearing emaciated because my taste buds do not enjoy the bland overcooked food served from the hospital style cafeteria, food that is unrecogniz­able and puréed to ensure I do not choke. Nothing on the menu will be what my previous self enjoyed eating. When my family complains about the food, they will find out that the facility is doing the best they can with $7.50 of funding per day for raw food. A prisoner to the choices of the dietitian prescribed food, the only crime I have committed is being elderly, and for this I am serving a life sentence.

What if we reinvented the aged care sector? What if we reimagined the aging journey? What if sleepless nights were filled with good dreams that might one day become a reality?

You don’t have to venture too far away from home to find examples that might just be the panacea we are all seeking. The sharing economy has created cohousing, pocket neighbourh­oods, the village movement, and care doulas who help navigate seniors through an often fragmented aged care system.

Further afield, in Tokyo, Japan, 10 centenaria­ns with dementia live together in a group home where their daily choices include a minimum: 1,500 calories, 1.5 litres of their favourite beverage, walking exercises, and meaningful activities. Seniors are toilet retrained and no longer use incontinen­ce pads, saving money while improving dignity, selfesteem and quality of life. Physiother­apists mobilize seniors out of their wheelchair­s who walk with assistive mobility aides.

In France, seniors move into nursing homes with time to adjust to their new home before dementia advances. Society has made longer lengths of stay an option for seniors requiring residentia­l care as well as capping the amount people pay. The result is that seniors become accustomed to their environmen­t. In Dijon, a senior spends his days in a workshop using a scroll saw independen­tly with a hand guard to prevent injury. When it’s time for a break he ventures down to the bistro where he enjoys a glass of Burgundy wine, eats cured meats and unpasteuri­zed cheeses, and crunches on buttery croissants.

In Sydney, Australia, a consumer-directed care bond program has created an aged care building boom. This renaissanc­e gave birth to the Scalabrini dementia village, where Italian speaking staff monitor seniors using smart technology enabling residents to wander freely around the outdoor piazza complete with a statue fountain of Venus, Vespas, gelato stand, wood burning pizzeria and a Roman Catholic church adorned with stain glass and a clock tower.

Also in Sydney, some seniors prefer a different way of life. SummitCare focuses on hospitalit­y by designing a hotel model residence. Traditiona­l institutio­nal design elements are eliminated: no handrails, no visible nurse call system, no uniforms, and no clothing protecting aprons. Couples choose to live together in a one-bedroom apartment, where they sleep together! It’s only ageism that tells us seniors are not interested in intimacy. Perhaps sex is the biggest elderly prejudice. The nursing home industry has perpetuate­d this anti-aging bias where government regulation­s do not allow couples, one with dementia and one without dementia, to live together in the same bedroom.

Without major transforma­tional reforms to the aged care sector, seniors will continue to be in an untenable situation. Too many seniors to care for, too few trained staff and too little money because neither the government nor individual­s want to pay more. Perhaps our culture is gerontopho­bic, viewing the elderly as burdensome and disposable. Systemic discrimina­tion is something to fear. Are we willing to upset the status quo? We have done our best to eliminate racism and sexism. Are we, are you, ready to take on institutio­nalized ageism?

Dan Levitt is executive director of Tabor Village, a memory care home offering supportive housing to seniors with memory impairment, Alzheimer’s and dementia. He is also adjunct professor of gerontolog­y at Simon Fraser University and adjunct professor in the School of Nursing at the University of British Columbia. He is a board member of the Global Aging Network.

The nursing home industry has perpetuate­d this anti-aging bias where government regulation­s do not allow couples, one with dementia and one without dementia, to live together in the same bedroom. Dan Levitt Too many seniors to care for, too few trained staff and too little money ...

 ??  ?? What if we reinvented the aged-care sector to improve dignity, self-esteem and quality of life, writes Dan Levitt, who notes global examples of innovative programs that are making a difference.
What if we reinvented the aged-care sector to improve dignity, self-esteem and quality of life, writes Dan Levitt, who notes global examples of innovative programs that are making a difference.

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