In what three health care professions is Ageism heavily seen?
What is Nursing, Social Work and Physicians?
What is "elderspeak"?
What is a specialized speech register resembling baby talk in addressing older adults?
1 out of how many older adults experienced discrimination in the health care system?
What is 1 out of 5?
Was their bias in this study and how?
What is Yes. Only in looking at one direction of ageism?
How did working with the elderly impact the nursing students?
What is it didn't? Students said they felt the same as they had before.
A difficulty seen from health care professionals is with patients who manage their own what?
What is treatment?
How does "elderspeak" make an older person feel?
What is incompetent, reduced self-esteem, depression or restiveness behaviours?
What was one of the variables they adjusted for in the study?
What is age, gender, race, education?
Define biological age?
What is how old someone is physically?
Why do younger healthcare professionals not want to work with the elderly?
What is there is a fear associated with old age, and the things that come with aging such as illness, death and helplessness?
Besides the difficulties working with the patient who else creates difficulties for health care professionals?
What is the patients family?
What is the main conclusion found in this study?
What is there is a high prevalence of "elderspeak" in nursing homes, therefore staff should be aware it is a form of ageism and should be well educated on how to properly speak to the elderly?
Where did the data come from that was used in the study?
What is the National Health and Retirement Study?
Health care is a limited resource, what quote did the author use to illustrate this?
What is "there will always be two drowning and only one life belt"?
Why might a student's NPV (Nursing Personal Value) score increase as they move up though school?
What is they have more clinical experience and know how to work well with the elderly and how to properly treat them?