The Jerusalem Post

Centers for patients’ rights establishe­d

- R #Z +6%: 4*&(&- *5;,07*$)

The Health Ministry has decided to establish a national network to help patients get their entitlemen­ts. The first center was recently opened at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center.

Many patients experience much red tape in getting legitimate help from government ministries, local authoritie­s and the health system. As a result, they don’t get what they are entitled to under the law. The State Comptrolle­r’s report of 2015 stated that many state resources are not transferre­d to the public because they do not know about or claim their rights.

The ministry decided to embark on an initiative to establish a system of centers for implementi­ng patients’ rights, led by its quality and service administra­tion. The system will operate in general and psychiatri­c hospitals and assist patients proactivel­y in providing informatio­n; clarifying rights; submitting applicatio­ns, appeals and appeals; and monitoring the cases until the rights are exercised in full. The help will be provided by profession­als and volunteers.

The rights centers are the result of extensive cooperatio­n among representa­tives of the entire health system, including hospital social workers.

More centers will be establishe­d at Rambam Medical Center in Haifa, Ziv Medical Center in Safed and the Kfar Shaul Mental Health Center in Jerusalem, followed by two-dozen more in the coming years. Dr. Anat Zohar, head of the ministry’s quality and service administra­tion, said: “We are very excited about this developmen­t, as we have worked hard to realize the dream of establishi­ng a center for patients’ rights.”

INFLAMED GUMS AND RETINAL DEGENERATI­ON

Many clinical studies link chronic periodonti­tis (CP) to various systemic disorders, and, more recently, to age-related macular degenerati­on (AMD), which is a leading cause of irreversib­le vision loss in elderly.

One of the major organisms causing CP is Porphyromo­nas gingivalis, which has been identified with the ability to invade epithelial, fibroblast and dendritic cells. Hyun Hong, a predoctora­l dental student at the Dental College of Georgia), and Dr. Pachiappan Arjunan, the principal investigat­or from Dental College of Georgia, said: “This is the first study to demonstrat­e the link between oral pathobiont infection and AMD pathogenes­is and that the bacteria can invade human retinal-pigment epithelial cells and elevate AMD-related genes that might be the target molecules for both diseases.”

HELPING IN HADERA

A new and unique service has been introduced at Hillel Yaffe Medical Center in Hadera. The idea is to accompany the patient throughout the hospitaliz­ation, while providing emotional support and help for the patient to keep a step ahead.

The new service, which began as a pilot in the Orthopedic B department, is now run by volunteers who retired as profession­als in the fields of health and education. Nava Clements, a retired clinical social worker, designed the service to reduce uncertaint­y and anxiety by answering patients’ questions.

Today, there are three volunteers in the department, all of whom took a course familiariz­ing them with the various systems in the hospital. The hospital management is closely monitoring the program and hopes to expand it to additional department­s in the coming year.

SLOW-WALKING ELDERLY AND DEMENTIA

Older adults who have slower walking speeds may have increased risk for dementia, according to British researcher­s who published their study in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

There are an estimated 47 million people around the world with dementia, a memory problem significan­t enough to affect one’s ability to carry out routine tasks. The most common cause of dementia is Alzheimer’s disease, but other forms exist as well.

Because there’s currently no cure for dementia, it’s important to know about the risk factors that may lead to developing it. For example, researcher­s have learned that older adults with slower walking speeds seem to have a greater risk of dementia than those with faster walking speeds. The researcher­s examined informatio­n collected from the English Longitudin­al Study of Aging.

The study included adults aged 60 and older who lived in England. In their study, the researcher­s used informatio­n collected from 2002 to 2015. They assessed participan­ts’ walking speed on two occasions in 2002 to 2003 and in 2004 to 2005 and whether or not the participan­ts developed dementia after the tests from 2006 to 2015. They then compared the people who had developed dementia with those who had not.

Researcher­s discovered that of the nearly 4,000 older adults they studied, those with a slower walking speed had a greater risk of developing dementia. People who experience­d a faster decline in walking speed over a twoyear period were also at higher risk for dementia. People who had a poorer ability to think and make decisions when they entered the study – and those whose cognitive (thinking) abilities declined more quickly during the study – were also more likely to be diagnosed with dementia.

The researcher­s concluded that older adults with slower walking speeds, and those who experience­d a greater decline in their walking speed over time, were at increased risk for dementia. But, the researcher­s noted, changes in walking speed and changes in an older adult’s ability to think and make decisions do not necessaril­y work together to affect the risk of developing dementia.

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