| Literature DB >> 35200522 |
Aniela Mendez1, Mildred Lopez1, Karina Rodriguez-Quintanilla1, Belinda Carrion1.
Abstract
Ageism seeps deep into our society, whether in law, policies, or healthcare practices it segregates individuals based on their age. The aim of this work was to evaluate the impact of an educational strategy in ageist attitudes against older adults in healthcare undergraduate students. A five-week intervention: Healthy environments and self-care for the older adults was implemented. To assess the impact of this strategy in ageist attitudes in participants, a simulated consultation with an older adult was conducted. Participants' perspectives on the experience were collected using an online survey. One hundred and thirty-eight undergraduate students from health programs were included. They highlighted growth in the understanding of the normal aging process and the prejudices that surround aging. During the role-play activity, participants identified communication, empathy, and professionalism as the abilities developed with this strategy and the need to show empathy and avoid prejudice against older adults in their clinical interactions. Educational interventions are a great tool to promote cultural changes, diminish prejudices and misconceptions of ageism in future healthcare professionals.Entities:
Keywords: ageism; educational innovation; health education; intergenerational interventions; older adults; prejudices
Year: 2022 PMID: 35200522 PMCID: PMC8872434 DOI: 10.3390/geriatrics7010017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geriatrics (Basel) ISSN: 2308-3417
Figure 1Impact of ageist attitudes in the different spheres of health.
Figure 2General outline for the Healthy Environments and Self-care for the Older Adults strategy.
Analytics of the Healthy environments and self-care for the older adult’s strategy.
| Week 1: | Week 2: | Week 3: Caring for the Older Adult | Week 4: Quality of Care | Week 5: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Theoretical Modules or Topics or Activities | 1.1 Theories of aging | 2.1 Healthy Aging | 3.1 Psychological and spiritual care | 4.1 General standards of care for the patient. | |
| 1.2 Physiology of aging by apparatus and systems and its impact on the functionality | 2.2 Integrated Care of Older People-ICOPE | 3.2 Support networks | 4.2 Assessment of the intra- and extra-domiciliary environment. | ||
| 1.3 Types of aging: usual, satisfactory, and pathological | 2.3 Medical care | 3.3 Psychological and behavioral symptoms in older adults | 4.3 Acute and chronic institutionalization. | ||
| 1.4 Quality of life | 2.4 Nutritional care | ||||
| 2.5 Dental care | |||||
| Practical Modules | 1.1 Genetic programming | 2.1 Comprehensive geriatric assessment | 3.1 Depression and anxiety. | 4.1 Usefulness of the interdisciplinary approach to improve early diagnosis and treatment of pathologies associated with loss of independence. | 5.1 Simulated scenario using role-play dynamic |
| 1.2 Telomere shortening | 2.2 Assessment to Intrinsic Capacity by Integrated Care to Older People | 3.2 Dementia. | 4.2 Methodology for the design of care guidelines that allow the adequate management of the geriatric patient in different care settings. | ||
| 1.3 Oxidative stress and free radicals | 2.3 Identification of heterogeneity in the older adult population (healthy, frail and geriatric patient). | 3.3 Caregiver overload | |||
| 1.4 Endocrine theory | |||||
| Challenge | 1.1 Relationship between the quality of life and health | 2.1 Brainstorming of innovative proposals | 3.1 Design of the implementation plan (with an established format, recorded in a checklist). | 3.2 Integrative project design and implementation plan. | 5.1 Presentation of the proposal to internal and external evaluators. |
| 1.2 Determinants of an adequate quality of life and factors that deteriorate it. | 2.2 Selection of the setting in which to develop the project (institution, home, association, community, day center, clinic) | 4.1 Report integration. | |||
| 1.3 Quality of life as a goal for healthy living in older people. | 2.3 Description of indicators (baseline, intermediate and final) to demonstrate the impact of your project on health | ||||
| 1.4 The bio-psycho-social approach to health from the perspective of Intrinsic ability to achieve an adequate quality of life | |||||
| 1.5 Situational diagnosis in your community | |||||
| 1.6 Development of the theoretical framework | |||||
| 1.7 Establish the project’s objective |
Figure 3Visual overview of the simulated scenario activity.
Figure 4Competencies developed by the educational strategy.
Impact of the experience in participant’s training.
| Role | Code | Examples of Participants Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Health professional | Clinical needs |
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| Doctor–patient communication |
| |
| Observer | Empathy to older adults |
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| Prejudice against older adults |
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| Patient | Empathy to older adults |
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| Validating emotions |
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| Prejudice against older adults |
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