Other Titles

Understanding challenges when working with older adults [Session]

Abstract

Session presented on Monday, November 9, 2015:

Teaching a free standing geronotology course to senior nursing students requires unique and innovative ways to engage the students. From the literature and from life, this challenge requires a hard look at the 'culture' surrounding older adults; not only in society, but also in healthcare. Most importantly it requires a hard look at the classroom, at the students and faculty. Culture change, is a challenge and an opportunity. In this senior level course, there is a perfect opportunity to help the students, who are so immersed in acute care, lab values and crisis intervention to come 'full circle' in their nursing education and 'put it all together.' Older adults are the perfect population to do this with as they are, by definition, experiencing normal changes of aging and multiple co-morbid conditions that can be affected, but not cured. Challenges include "putting a face" on older adults so that they are not seen as a homogenous population. The faculty need to be agents of change and do what all agents of change do - shake things up! Faculty need to speak a new language and do new things that entice students to leave their comfort zones of predictable lectures, paperwork and clinical experiences in acute care facilities. The didactic information has to demonstrate to the students how to take what they know and apply it to this very special population. New concepts such as atypical presentation and geriatric syndromes must replace traditional applications of medical information. Subtle ageist beliefs need to be challenged and clinical sites must be a reflection where older adults live in communities.

Description

43rd Biennial Convention 2015 Theme: Serve Locally, Transform Regionally, Lead Globally.

Author Details

Katheryn Fernandez, RN; Catherine Maurer Baack, RN, BC, CNS

Sigma Membership

Rho Omicron

Type

Presentation

Format Type

Text-based Document

Study Design/Type

N/A

Research Approach

N/A

Keywords:

Nursing Education, Older Adults, Teaching Paradigms

Conference Name

43rd Biennial Convention

Conference Host

Sigma Theta Tau International

Conference Location

Las Vegas, Nevada, USA

Conference Year

2015

Rights Holder

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Acquisition

Proxy-submission

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Transforming perspective on older adults: Conceptualizing the "silver tsunami" as a cultural paradigm shift

Las Vegas, Nevada, USA

Session presented on Monday, November 9, 2015:

Teaching a free standing geronotology course to senior nursing students requires unique and innovative ways to engage the students. From the literature and from life, this challenge requires a hard look at the 'culture' surrounding older adults; not only in society, but also in healthcare. Most importantly it requires a hard look at the classroom, at the students and faculty. Culture change, is a challenge and an opportunity. In this senior level course, there is a perfect opportunity to help the students, who are so immersed in acute care, lab values and crisis intervention to come 'full circle' in their nursing education and 'put it all together.' Older adults are the perfect population to do this with as they are, by definition, experiencing normal changes of aging and multiple co-morbid conditions that can be affected, but not cured. Challenges include "putting a face" on older adults so that they are not seen as a homogenous population. The faculty need to be agents of change and do what all agents of change do - shake things up! Faculty need to speak a new language and do new things that entice students to leave their comfort zones of predictable lectures, paperwork and clinical experiences in acute care facilities. The didactic information has to demonstrate to the students how to take what they know and apply it to this very special population. New concepts such as atypical presentation and geriatric syndromes must replace traditional applications of medical information. Subtle ageist beliefs need to be challenged and clinical sites must be a reflection where older adults live in communities.