What does it think to live with age and dementia? These simulation can show you

What does it think to live with age and dementia? These simulation can show you

the currentWhat do you like to be dementia? This care center can teach you

What if you can really feel what it is to be old – as your body slows down, your senses fade, and the world becomes difficult to navigate – year before the arrival of your time?

In a Toronto Simulation Center, this understanding becomes terrorist, providing care to creating sympathy and attaining deep insights into the daily realities of those they take care of.

Meghan Adams said, “Those people we put in it are not, they are not adults, so they adopt an experience that is different from themselves, and we hope that it changes in the way they approach and interact with those what they work,” Meghan Adams said. the current’S host matte gallow.

Adams is the manager of Aging in Education and Knowledge Exchange and the manager of simulation and virtual learning at the Knowledge Exchange, and directed Gallowas through experience earlier this year.

She begins by preparing her in a weighted jumpsuit, then to restrict the movement, her elbow, knees and tight bands wrapped around the neck.

This was followed by the Goggles, who blurred their vision, the earplugs that provoked their hearing and gloves, which reduced their sense of touch.

Once fully favorable, the gallowavas were given a cane and asked to walk in a bookshell and take a book. His actions were slow and physical inconvenience was soon with emotional disagreement.

“There is a real concern,” Gallowway told Adams. “I can’t see some things … there are other people around, but I don’t know what is going on.”

It is only one of those devices that the center uses to explain to people what this age is. They also have a tablet-based simulation that allows users to experience life with dementia-as for a person to wrong a rebel on the bathroom door, causing fear or confusion.

A photo composite that shows the matte gallowway in a fraud simulation suit to the left, and the gallowway is looking at a tablet with a woman with a short blonde.
Current hosts wear Matt Gallow, left, a fraud simulation suit. On the right, he tests a tablet-based VR experience, imitating dementia, which is directed by Meghan Adams, a simulations manager at the Education and Knowledge Exchange in Azing. (Meli Gums/CBC)

Large adults are the fastest growing demographic in Canada. Canadian Institute of Health Research Projects by 2026More than one canadians out of five will be senior. By 2046, Number of Canadians aged 85 years and above It is expected to be triple.

Aging does not mean automatically Weakening – but it risks the risk of chronic disease, physical fall and cognitive loss. More than 1.6 million Canadians currently live with fraud, which is It is estimated to grow from More than 2.5 million in the next decade.

as well as, Number of Canadian people living with dementia It is expected to climb up to 187 percent between 2020 and 2050, reaching more than 1.7 million people.

And as people need care, the number of carers also increases. One of four Canadians Provide care To a friend, family member, or neighbor and half canadian So at some point in his life.

Take care of care

Director of Health Policy Research at National Institute on aging, Dr. According to Sameer Sinha, a loved one has a “24/7 job”.

For example, sympathy-building simulation equipment, Sinha, says, not only understands the understanding of caregivers, but also highlight the challenges that face carers.

“We must identify that carers need support and we should really focus on ensuring that we can provide the necessary help in whatever possible,” he said.

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The three-day workshop set up by NBCC in Monkton teaches informal carers how to prevent bedsore, compete with burnouts and use very important services.

He It is said that she works with a woman who has been taking care of her husband for eight years. Sinha The role is to ensure that it has information, strategy and confidence that he needs to handle complex and emotionally challenging situations.

The lower knowledge a career, the more stressful, the experience is as stressful. Many carers suffer from anxiety, depression and physical health problems.

While emotional support is necessary, he says that practical help is equally important. Sinha says that the same career’s husband participates in an adult dementia day program several days a week – gives him significant time to rest and recharge him.

In addition, carers often spend thousands of dollars every year on out-of-packet costs like transport.

The man smiles in the camera in a white doctor's coat.
Dr. Sameer Sinha is a Director of Health Policy Research at the National Institute on Aging and a slight healing in the Sinai Health System and University Health Network at Toronto. (Turgut Yeter/CBC)

Encourageial care

For adams, like those made at the center, it is important to create more kind models of simulation care.

In Busy healthcare settingsShe says, it is easy for providers to focus on tasks and forget the person behind the diagnosis. Adams believes that sympathy should be cultivated.

Adams said, “We must be deliberately about giving people opportunities … Take back from day to day rush and join why they are in career,” Adams said.

“People are in healthcare because they help to take care and help others.”

She says that simulation is designed to create a change in perspective, for some people, the intestine may be.

“Sometimes people get upset – they cry, because you feel something,” Adams said. “You feel that you won’t stand in front of you and said,” The older people have different hearing and different vision, and the fraud looks like this. ”

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That emotional relationship, she says, helps all involve all in care – employees, residents, families and friends – focusing on humans, not just the situation.

“They are a person with dementia, but they are a person, and they have priorities and history and family and amazing, rich, stories of life,” Edams said.

“If you can join him, you join the person who is still there.”

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