“Grandmas are moms with lots of frosting.”
~Author Unknown
Working in acute care for over 20 years I’ve been on the care-giving end of many elderly patients; the majority of them being women who tend to live longest. For many women longevity can be a mixed blessing; while women do live longer than men (on average 5 yrs), they are at greater risk of an old age tempered with disability.
Aging with Chronic Disease
Many of our disease states, especially in the elderly, have gone from acute, such as pneumonia ( the “old man’s friend”) which killed the patient in 2 weeks—to chronic; not cured but managed over long periods of time. We tend to see acute exacerbations of chronic conditions such as congestive heart failure, diabetes, or COPD, over and over again.
The diseases that drastically shortened life-spans in the past are now the cause of multiple hospitalizations and caregiver-burnout. In the parlance of medical-slang we called them “frequent flyers” and they actually get to be well known by staff as they come in for periodic “tune-ups.”
In rare but extreme cases this can lead to ” Granny Dumping,” the abandonment of an elder to hospitals on Holidays or Weekends by family who can no longer cope with the multiple co-morbidities of grandma.
When do Women’s Chronic Conditions Start?
Researchers at Duke University Medical School found that obesity and arthritis begin for women in the child-bearing and peri-menopausal years caused by weight gain. In addition the study showed the women were more ly than men to experience fractures, vision problems and bronchitis.
“Women have a natural tendency to gain more weight than men over the lifespan, but may be more motivated to maintain a healthy weight if they realize that those extra pounds make it more ly that they will be disabled in later years – potentially becoming a burden to their children or requiring a nursing home. This is important because it suggests that women’s tendency to pack on extra pounds in their child-bearing and peri-menopausal years translates into loss of independence in their old age.”
- Heather Whitson, M.D. (Assistant Professor of Medicine)
Women’s Chronic Diseases Translates to Loss of Independence
Who ends up in skilled care facilities? According to the U.S. Bureau of the Census , slightly over 5 percent of the 65+ population are in nursing homes, assisted living, and congregate housing; and rates increase with age from 1.4% of the youngest-old to 24.5% of the oldest-old. It’s usually women due to:
1. Longevity: Women invariably represent a high percentage of the oldest old. For example, in the United States in 2000, some 67% of those above age 80 were women; among centenarians, women accounted for 87% of the total
2. Spend Down : Life-time savings is used up by caring for husbands in old age
3. Lack of Informal Care : Care provided by non-paid family members
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In teaching a new class, Blueprint for Elder Caregiving, I have come up with Five Principles that caregivers can use when caring for elderly or frail parents. I’m hopeful that they’ll be helpful to you, regardless of the type of caregiving in which you’re engaged:
Recently I was contacted by a family whose 84 year old father had passed away unexpectedly leaving his wife of 62 years alone. The family was distraught and grieving. The family was still grappling with the loss of the father, so their daughter brought her mother to stay at her home for a few days.