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Bruce, Courtenay R. – Gerontologist, 2012
Motion sensor-based monitoring technologies are designed to maintain independence and safety of older individuals living alone. These technologies use motion sensors that are placed throughout older individuals' homes in order to derive information about eating, sleeping, and leaving/returning home habits. Deviations from normal behavioral…
Descriptors: Older Adults, Technology, Independent Living, Safety
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Mak, Wingyun; Sorensen, Silvia – Gerontologist, 2012
Purpose: This study examines the longitudinal patterns of Preparation for Future Care (PFC), defined as Awareness, Avoidance, Gathering Information, Decision Making, and Concrete Plans, in first-degree relatives of people with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Design and Methods: Eight time points across 6.5 years from a subsample of adults aged 70 years…
Descriptors: Alzheimers Disease, Caregivers, Patients, Older Adults
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Chettih, Mindy – Gerontologist, 2012
The population of older adults in the United States is growing in size and diversity, presenting challenges to health care providers and patients in the context of health care decision making (DM), including obtaining informed consent for treatment, advance care planning, and deliberations about end-of-life care options. Although existing…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Cultural Awareness, Older Adults, Health Services
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Doherty-King, Barbara; Bowers, Barbara – Gerontologist, 2011
Adults over the age of 65 years account for 60% of all hospital admissions and experience consequential negative outcomes directly related to hospitalization. Negative outcomes include falls, delirium, loss in ability to perform basic activities of daily living, and new walking dependence. New walking dependence, defined as the loss in ability to…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Nurses, Older Adults, Patients
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Shura, Robin; Siders, Rebecca A.; Dannefer, Dale – Gerontologist, 2011
Purpose: This study's purpose was to advance the process of culture change within long-term care (LTC) and assisted living settings by using participatory action research (PAR) to promote residents' competence and nourish the culture change process with the active engagement and leadership of residents. Design and Methods: Seven unit-specific PAR…
Descriptors: Nursing Homes, Health Services, Health Facilities, Action Research
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Wallhagen, Margaret I. – Gerontologist, 2010
Purpose: To explore dimensions of stigma experienced by older adults with hearing loss and those with whom they frequently communicate to target interventions promoting engagement and positive aging. Design and Methods: This longitudinal qualitative study conducted interviews over 1 year with dyads where one partner had hearing loss. Participants…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Hearing Impairments, Assistive Technology, Older Adults
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Schroepfer, Tracy A.; Noh, Hyunjin; Kavanaugh, Melinda – Gerontologist, 2009
Purpose: This study explored the role control plays in the dying process of terminally ill elders by investigating the aspects of the dying process over which they seek to exercise control, the strategies they use, and whether they desire to exercise more control. Design and Methods: In-depth face-to-face interviews were conducted with 84…
Descriptors: Hospices (Terminal Care), Content Analysis, Older Adults, Death
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Curry, Leslie A.; Robison, Julie; Shugrue, Noreen; Keenan, Patricia; Kapp, Marshall B. – Gerontologist, 2009
Purpose: Although prior research suggests that economic, behavioral, and psychosocial factors influence decisions not to purchase long-term care insurance, few studies have examined the interplay among these factors in depth and from the consumer's point of view. This study was intended to further illuminate these considerations, generate…
Descriptors: Gerontology, Decision Making, Interviews, Grounded Theory
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Schmid, Bettina; Allen, Rebecca S.; Haley, Philip P.; DeCoster, Jamie – Gerontologist, 2010
Purpose: We examined race/ethnicity and cultural context within hypothetical end-of-life medical decision scenarios and its influence on patient-proxy agreement. Design and Methods: Family dyads consisting of an older adult and 1 family member, typically an adult child, responded to questions regarding the older adult's preferences for…
Descriptors: First Aid, Race, Research Methodology, Older Adults
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Kane, Robert L.; Boston, Krista; Chilvers, Mary – Gerontologist, 2007
Purpose: The purpose of this article is to describe an innovative online system to support long-term-care decision making. Design and Methods: The Long-Term Care Choices tool is a web-based system that uses expert opinion and structures decision making. Results: The system has been well accepted, and most users find it easy to use. Implications:…
Descriptors: Online Systems, Decision Making, Internet, Aging (Individuals)
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Steinberg, Alan; And Others – Gerontologist, 1986
The ethical primacy of patient involvement in treatment decision-making requires that more attention be paid to assessment of a patient's competency to make treatment decisions. Makes recommendations to increase sensitivity to this issue with significantly impaired elderly nursing home patients and to improve existing decision-making procedures.…
Descriptors: Competence, Decision Making Skills, Institutionalized Persons, Medical Services
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Newcomer, Robert; And Others – Gerontologist, 1990
Examined how four Social/Health Maintenance Organizations (S/HMOs) were marketed during their first two operational years and identified characteristics associated with decision to enroll in these health plans. Results from telephone survey of Medicare beneficiaries revealed that enrollment in S/HMOs was affected by public awareness and perceived…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Health, Marketing, Older Adults
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High, Dallas M. – Gerontologist, 1991
Questions whether gerontologists are creating myth about families by emphasizing individual autonomy as independence without family interdependence and by advocating advance directives. Argues that another antifamily trend is developing despite empirical evidence showing that elderly persons prefer family to represent them in surrogate decision…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Family Relationship, Older Adults
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Tymchuk, Alexander J.; And Others – Gerontologist, 1988
Presented informed consent information on high and low risk medical procedures to elderly persons in long term care facility in standard, simplified, or storybook format. Comprehension was significantly better for simplified and storybook formats. Ratings of decision-making ability approximated comprehension test results. Comprehension test…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Decision Making, Medical Services, Older Adults
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Henderson, Martha – Gerontologist, 1990
Studied 63 retirement community residents with living wills to determine whether more specific planning for, and control over, their dying process would decrease their anxiety about death. Experimental group received counseling and completed questionnaire regarding specific treatments, proxy decision making, and related questions. Mean death…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Death, Decision Making, Individual Power
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