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Module 4:  Care Centers Aging Services of Minnesota Module 4:  Care Centers Aging Services of Minnesota

Module 4: Care Centers Aging Services of Minnesota - PowerPoint Presentation

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Module 4: Care Centers Aging Services of Minnesota - PPT Presentation

Older Adult Services Orientation Manual Aging Services of Minnesota 2014 1 Acknowledgements This resource was made possible by funding from the Ronald Patterson Governance Fund of the Aging Services of Minnesota Foundation ID: 779550

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Slide1

Module 4: Care Centers

Aging Services of MinnesotaOlder Adult Services Orientation Manual

© Aging Services of Minnesota 2014

1

Slide2

AcknowledgementsThis resource was made possible by funding from the

Ronald Patterson Governance Fund of the Aging Services of Minnesota Foundation  

© Aging Services of Minnesota 2014

2

TERMS OF USE

Aging Services of Minnesota (Aging Services) is the sole and exclusive owner of and retains all rights to this Orientation Manual (“Manual”) and all associated registrations.   Aging Services makes this Manual available free of charge only to its members on the Members Only section of the Aging Services website, which is password protected.

Member representatives are authorized to use any or all of this Manual only in the performance of duties and responsibilities on behalf of the member organization.  The contents of the Manual may be customized to meet the needs of the member organization, and copies of any portion of the Manual may be distributed within the member organization.

In every other respect, members and member representatives may not: (

i

) alter the Manual; (ii) add to the Manual; (iii) update the content of the Manual; (iv) distribute reproductions of the Manual to any person or organization not a member of Aging Services; (v) borrow portions of the Manual for use in other works; (vi) make derivative works; or (vii) be identified as an author of the Manual.

Developed by Health Dimensions Group, Minneapolis,

MN

Slide3

Care Centers

© Aging Services of Minnesota 2014

3

“Because chronic disease prevalence is higher and multiple conditions are more common, services received by residents in care centers have changed significantly from traditional custodial/personal care to clinically complex care”.

Andy Edeburn, MA | VP of Continuum Strategies

Health Dimensions Group

Slide4

Care Centers

© Aging Services of Minnesota 2014

4

Care centers

may also be referred to as

nursing homes,

skilled

nursing

facilities, nursing facilities, or long-term care facilities

Slide5

Care CenterServices

Provided

Health care treatment and assessment of patients and residents not in need of an acute care facility, but requiring nursing supervision on a 24-hour basis

Care centers provide two distinct types of care:

Post-hospital or –acute care

Referred to as rehabilitative

, short-term care or skilled care

Rehabilitative care needs due to injury, disability, or illness

Long-term care

Nursing and personal

care and services above the level of room and board

Needed regularly and on an ongoing basis due to a physical and/or cognitive condition

© Aging Services of Minnesota 2014

5

Slide6

Care Center

Resident Care Staff

© Aging Services of Minnesota 2014

6

Slide7

Post-Hospital Care

Services Provided© Aging Services of Minnesota 2014

7

Patients no longer requiring in-patient hospital care, but are not yet able to return to their previous home, may receive short-term care within designated care center units or beds

Slide8

Post-Hospital Care

Common Conditions

© Aging Services of Minnesota 2014

8

Common conditions requiring post-hospital care:

Slide9

Long-Term Care

Long term care offers:A comprehensive range of medical/nursing, personal,

and social services coordinated to meet the daily physical,

social, and emotional needs of people who are

chronically ill or disabled and anticipate an extended placement

To residents who:

Requires

24-hour medical and/personal care

Requires

assistance with the majority of

activities of daily living (ADL) due

to

physical

disability or

dementia

Needs

a

nursing home level

of care as assessed by the preadmission screening team

© Aging Services of Minnesota 2014

9

Slide10

Long-Term Care

Services Provided

© Aging Services of Minnesota 2014

10

Services include:

Medication

administration and management

Nursing care

Palliative

and end-of-life care

Personal care assistance with ADLs (predominantly mobility, toileting, bathing, and eating)

Programming for impaired cognition and behavioral conditions like dementia

Rehabilitative services: physical, occupational, speech therapy, and respiratory therapy

Restorative nursing

RN

case management

Slide11

Notes

© Aging Services of Minnesota 201411