Showing posts with label Darlene Yee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Darlene Yee. Show all posts

Sunday, September 30, 2018

Wellness

Due to my work with mostly homebound older adults over the past three years, I have been missing-in-action from many community events.  Last Friday afternoon, I caught up with former colleagues when I returned to campus for Department of Aging & Adult Services (DAAS) Community Training and San Francisco State University (SFSU) Gerontology Program’s inaugural Silver Lining Lecture Series: Aging, Health & Wellness in San Francisco.  When people ask where have I been “hiding”, I respond that I’ve been working with older adults in facilities.
fa·cil·i·ty (fə-sĭl′ĭ-tē)
n. pl. fa·cil·i·ties
2. often facilities
a. A building, room, array of equipment, or a number of such things, designed to serve a 
particular function: hospitals and other health care facilities.
b. Something that facilitates an action or process: The region has very poor transportation
facilities.
3. facilities Informal A restroom or public toilet.
facility. (n.d.) American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.(2011). Retrieved September 30 2018 from https://www.thefreedictionary.com/facility

My response was a surprise to some who knew me as a gerontology student, focused on home- and community-based services to facilitate aging in place.  But as a gerontologist three years after graduation, I decided to be intentional in gaining experience at every level in the continuum of care which includes facilities, such as Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly (RCFE, aka Assisted Living) and Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNF).  I have avoided working at for-profit facilities because resident care means more than profits (though I was fine working at for-profit accounting and financial organizations prior to launching my gerontology career).  Also, I have observed how residents with complex medical needs are underserved at RCFEs, and ought to receive more appropriate care at SNF.  In any case, I have remained focused on health promotion and wellness throughout the continuum of care. 
SFSU Gerontology Program Coordinator Darlene Yee-Melichar and San Francisco Aging & Adult Services Commission Advisory Council President Leon Schmidt welcomed attendees in Library Special Events Room filled to capacity.  (Took photos from front row, where I was seated next to fellow SFSU Gerontology alumna and solo ager Betty Burr.)
Keynote speaker Scott Wiener, State Senator, discussed his Legislative Agenda for Seniors in the SF Bay Area: his authoring of SB 219 LGBT Bill of Rights in Long-Term Care (LTC) and SB 2021 Extending Prescription Drug Co-Pay Limits; ongoing efforts to ensure all seniors have access to housing, nutrition and health care; livable wage for IHSS workers so seniors can age in home; and “if they’re in assisted living or nursing home (facilities), make it a positive experience.” He also commended 30th Street Senior Center for its meals and supportive services so seniors are not isolated. 
SFSU Gerontology Advisory Council President and alumnus Tom Berry, with Openhouse co-founder Marcy Adelman and Darlene Yee-Melichar, presented Distinguished LTC Advocate Award to Senator Wiener.
 
Close-up of LTC Advocate Award 
30th Street Senior Center Director Valorie Villela and Beth Macleod, LCSW.
SFSU Gerontology alumna and Eldercare Advocacy Bay Area Founder Cristina Flores with her mother and daughter – three generations, though they appear to be from the same generation?! 
Professor Yee presented Developing Gerontology Workforce Competency to Promote Healthy Aging & LTC.  She predicted growth in nursing home care because demand will drive supply, as baby boomers age into the oldest-old (age 85+) with higher level of care needs in the next 10 to 20 years.  Graduate gerontology students can complete 480 hour internship as SNF Administrator-In-Training (AIT); without a master’s degree, the state requires completion of 1,000 hours SNF AIT. 
DAAS Program Analyst and urban planner Valerie Coleman presented Age & Disability Friendly SF, noting San Francisco is unique in including “Disability” to Age-friendly initiative that began implementation this year.
Hey, that’s my photo of Dance Generators (with Beth Macleod) performance at 2015 Party with a Purpose celebration of Long-Term Care Coordinating Council's 10th Anniversary, from blog post at http://geronature.blogspot.com/2015/10/aging-disability-friendly-san-francisco.html! 
Gwen Harris, SFSU Gerontology alumna and Geriatric Care Manager, presented on Palliative Care & Quality of Life.  She recommended that every 18 year old should be given voter registration and Advance Care Directive. 
At this month’s SF End-of-Life Network meeting held at Cypress Golden Gate (RCFE), Art for Recovery Program Director Cindy Perlis discussed her 30 years of art therapy with cancer patients at UCSF. 
Eat a rainbow of colorful doughnuts for breakfast at Pathways to Improved Care: Rehabilitation Symposium at Laguna Honda 
Paul Christopher Focht, Aud.D., presented The Diagnosis and Treatment of Hearing Impairment.  He conducts otoscopic inspection of the ear canal for cerumen (aka “earwax”) buildup that can cause problems with hearing and balance, which increase risks for cognitive decline and falling.  When we age, cerumen impaction is more common because the cerumen is much drier so it gets hard and creates a plug.  As many as two-thirds of residents in LTC facilities may suffer from cerumen impaction, and Medicare covered nearly 1.7 million impaction removal procedures at a cost of more than $51 million in 2016! 

Older Americans (age 65+) continue to make themselves heard during elections.  In 2016, their turnout rate was 70.9%, the highest of any age group.  The majority (51%) voted for Trump, with the strongest support from older white men (59%) and older white women (53%). 
Ian Haney Lopez, UC Berkeley Law Professor and author of Dog Whistle Politics: How Coded Racial Appeals Have Reinvented Racism & Wrecked the Middle Class (2014), talked about The Future of Whiteness at Rights and Wrongs: A Constitution Day Conference at SFSU.  He presented a crash course on how political strategists have exploited racial pandering to build resentment toward government, manipulating voters into supporting policies that favor the wealthy.  Starting with the 1964 Southern Strategy, they could appeal to rising anxiety/fear among whites to break the New Deal coalition, bringing race into politics—not in name, but “code” such as law and order, state’s rights, Silent Majority, Real American, end welfare as we know it, etc.  
Similar to Reframing Aging, Ian seeks to reframe the Race-Class Narrative for cross-racial solidarity and shared prosperity.  High levels of inequality negatively affect even the affluent, possibly because inequality reduces social cohesion so everyone suffers.
Check out video, “We Must Talk About Race to Fix Economic Inequality.”  
Cal State University (CSU):"As the CSU got darker, funding got lighter"
When I invited Marc Dollinger, SFSU Richard and Rhoda Goldman Chair of Jewish Studies and Social Responsibility, to speak at a RCFE about his new book Black Power, Jewish Politics: Reinventing the Alliance in the 1960s, he cautioned that he sometimes found that “older crowds are not as excited or engaged” with his presentation because “it could represent a revision of their own memory,” and offered a less risky topic based on his three other books.  My response was bring it on! with excitement that Marc’s new book presented a challenging perspective that would take us out of our comfort zone and stimulate brain connectivity! We learned new vocabulary, filiopietistic (ethnic self-congratulations, like aren’t Jews great?) historiographic analysis (the interpretation of the writing of history over time).

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Charting new frontiers in aging at GSA

Had a blast attending my first Gerontological Society of America (GSA) Annual Scientific Meeting in San Diego (http://www.geron.org/annual-meeting)!  Upon arrival, I was briefly distracted when I (foodie that I am) learned that the 9th annual San Diego Bay Wine & Food Festival was taking place at the same time . . . but there was no time to discreetly frolic and detour because our GSA meeting was jam-packed with events scheduled from 6 am until 10 pm:  symposium and poster sessions, breakfasts and section business meeting lunches, award presentations and receptions, evening interest group meetings and dinners, film screening, mentoring and networking, exhibit hall visits, etc.
San Diego Welcomes signs: International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans conference ending just as our GSA meeting was beginning seemed to represent my own career transition from employee benefits to gerontology!  I hold a Certified Employee Benefits Specialist (CEBS) designation from International Foundation and the Wharton School, so I’d attend the annual conferences as part of my continuing education.  Since my previous career involved helping people with retirement security, the next logical step seems to be helping people during their retirement with all the issues that arise with aging--including their own retirement income crisis due to the declining three-legged stool (Social Security + employer-sponsored pensions + personal savings), increasing health care costs, longer life expectancies, etc.
 
Buffet of rainbow-colored ribbons:  Gerontology is an interdisciplinary field representing BS (Biological Sciences-orange), BSS (Behavioral & Social Sciences-green), HS (Health Sciences-blue) and SRPP (Social Research, Policy & Practice-red). 
Ribbons for my name badge: New Member (gold), SRPP (red), ESPO (Emerging Scholar and Professional Organization-purple) and Award Winner (yellow).
President’s Welcome Reception:  spotted Bobbie Yee, my aunt’s high school classmate who played matchmaker between my aunt and her cousin.  Bobbie was bridesmaid and I was flower girl at their wedding several decades ago!  Bobbie was also my introduction to the study of gerontology (“what are you studying?” I remember asking).
Exhibit Hall Opening & Poster Session:  this eye-catching poster on alcohol use in Stockholm displays the colorful fusion of arts & sciences.
ESPO Breakfast & Community Meeting:  immediately followed New Member Meet & Greet so I enjoyed a second breakfast at Marriott :-)  My attendance here was mandatory to receive Carol Schutz Award.  Thank you GSA and my accommodating SFSU professors for excusing my absence from classes last week so I could attend this awesome meeting!
President’s Opening Plenary Session:  GSA President Nancy Whitelaw told us that this year’s meeting was her 40th!  Wow, she also mentioned there were 3,600 registered attendees, including 600 international attendees from 30 different countries!
GSA Executive Director James Appleby: great man who signed check for my award, thank you!
Keynote speaker James Fowler:  UC San Diego Professor of Medical Genetics and Political Science and author of Connected: The Surprising Power of our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives, discussed the social spread of obesity, smoking and happiness.

Autograph opportunities with gerontology authors

Breaking the Social Security Glass Ceiling: A Proposal to Modernize Women’s Benefits (SRPP) was chaired by Carroll Estes, author of Social Policy & Aging: A Critical Perspective (textbook used in my Aging & Social Policy class).  Symposium was based on a report co-authored by Estes at http://www.iwpr.org/publications/pubs/breaking-the-social-security-glass-ceiling-a-proposal-to-modernize-womens-benefits
How to Live on When Control Fails (SRPP):  Harry (Rick) Moody, author of Aging: Concepts and Controversies (textbook used in my Aging in Multidimensional Context class) told us this was really a Humanities session.  Instead of focusing on autonomy and control, he said the issue should be on how to provide dignity.  I highly recommend subscribing to Moody's free e-newsletters at http://www.hrmoody.com/newsletters.html

SFSU professors take the stage
What Will It Take to Care for a World of Older Women? Office of Women’s Health (OWH) Senior Advisor Mary Worstell, OWH Deputy Assistant Secretary Nancy Lee and SFSU Gerontology Program Chair Darlene Yee-Melichar held listening session to obtain input on access to care, health literacy, public-private partnership and the budget.
Research Strategies to Create an Age-Friendly World One Community at a Time (SRPP): SFSU Gerontology Professor Anabel Pelham led efforts with students to have Los Altos and Los Altos Hills designated as age-friendly cities by the World Health Organization (WHO).  She highlighted the need to involve all stakeholders and to emphasize that age-friendly is “good for all generations.” 
Aging in Asia:  SFSU Social Work Professor Rashmi Gupta started this interest group. Seoul, Korea will host 20th IAGG World Congress of Gerontology and Geriatrics meeting next year.  San Francisco will host IAGG in 2017 (http://www.iagg.info/news-iagg?page=1)! In the meantime, we can work to have San Francisco join the WHO Global Network of Age-Friendly Cities at  http://www.who.int/ageing/publications/Age_friendly_cities_checklist.pdf.

Today & the future
Honoring Contributions of Elaine Brody: “Women in the Middle” Revisited (BSS):  “Women in the Middle” refers to daughters, who are the main caregivers of elderly parents, caught in the middle to competing demands in their roles as mother, daughter and employee.  90-year old Brody mentioned testifying in Capitol Hill, before she retired 30 years ago, and asked why today’s gerontologists are no longer doing the same?  (Read her insights on being a "very, very old" gerontologist at http://www.geron.org/uploads/documents/AnInsider'sPerspective.pdf)

ESPO/AGHE: Exploring Post-Graduation Opportunities (HS):  listening to recent graduate Tara McMullen discuss working at Centers for Medicare and Medicaid inspired me to consider returning to the federal government to do policy work, which has such potential to make a huge impact on society.  But this seems to depend on who's in power and the prevailing view of government's role.  I previously worked at the U.S. Department of Labor under Secretary Robert Reich during the Clinton Administration’s first term (which enacted the Family Medical Leave Act, attempted health care reform and endured the federal government shutdown/Contract with America).
 
What Future for Social Security? (SRPP):  Moody (again, this time playing talk show host) with Andy Achenbaum and Larry Polivka.  Moody announced that he would be retiring from AARP and distributed copies of its publication, The Future of Social Security: 12 Proposals You Should Know About (http://www.aarp.org/work/social-security/info-05-2012/future-of-social-security-proposals.html).
Old Guys Rule ("The older I get, the better I was") t-shirts were a common sight in San Diego! 

These are just a few highlights from last week's GSA meeting.  Hope to cover more in upcoming postings so stay tuned.