Before this class I had worked as a CNA on medical surgical floors and had so many patients that were aging adults. I also have helped my family a lot with taking care of my grandparents, especially during the pandemic. I love the stories that aging adults will tell you about their lives because you never know what is going to come out of their mouth and you never know quite how interesting their lives have been. I have enjoyed caring for patients that remind me of my grandparents, and it made me happy to care for other people’s grandparents like they were my own. I have had interest working with older adults, but working on a medical surgical floor for my preceptorship was exhausting. There are a lot of people that end up in the hospital and even though they require care they want to refuse it and are not pleasant to be around, which is unfortunate because most patients usually are kind and thankful toward staff. About ¼ of our patient population was made up of patients that have a form of dementia and have nothing physically wrong with them anymore and are just simply waiting there for nursing home or memory care placement. There are not many facilities in Maine with open beds and it is sad to see how long these patients will wait in the hospital when they are healthy physically. It was very unfortunate, but I even saw a few of them develop C. Dif. from being in the hospital and around other patients that may have it, especially if they shared the hallway showers or bathrooms.
The polypharmacy lecture was interesting to me, especially the part about the prescribing cascade. It is a stereotype of older adults that they are on a ton of medications, but that can be the reality for some older adults due to over prescribing and due to providers treating side effects with more medications. I have helped my family take a step back and look at all my grandparents’ medications after I took our pharmacology class and learned about medication interactions. There are so many interactions that could be occurring that primary doctors may not be aware of if it is an herbal supplement or over the counter medication that is being taken along with the patients prescribed medications. Unfortunately, a lot of people that take medications get that paper with their prescription bag that lists all side effects, possible complications, medication interactions, and more and they throw it right in the trash with the paper bag. Therefore, people don’t even take the chance to learn about the substance they are taking into their body or learn about how it could potentially affect them. This class opened my eyes up to how polypharmacy can be so hard for older adults and being on many different medications at one time could be confusing for anyone. If I work with any adults on multiple medications, I want to take the time to look over the list and ask them if these are the correct medications that they are on and make sure none are missing including herbal supplements and over the counter medications that they may be taking regularly.
Another thing that I learned about from this class was different signs that could be indicative of elder abuse. We went really in depth about different types of elder abuse with the guest speaker Polly Campbell and I found her lecture so amazing. She actually has worked with my dad through his job at the Family Violence Project, and he has always told me how incredible her lectures and speeches are. I feel much more confident about my abilities to assess elder abuse during any patient assessment, and I want to do my best to be an advocate for older adults and do my job as a mandated reporter.
I think I learned a lot of lessons about not taking life too seriously and focusing on making good relationships with people throughout my life. We learned a lot about social isolation, me especially because I did my VR research project on that, and that terrifies me. I don’t want to spend the years of my life where I have the most time to do the things I love and enjoy alone. I want to be surrounded by family and loved ones and I want to spend my life making sure I maintain those relationships with people I love. I want to become a nurse and try to make every patient I see have just a little bit better of a day because they talked to me. I want to make patients feel listened to, cared for, and safe around me. I also want to make sure that as I age, I focus on what medications I am being put on and always do my own research about possible medication interactions even when I am going to purchase over the counter medications.
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