Not What it Seems
Not All Aging is Equal
The Fine Print
Teach Me Something
Supporting the Journey
100

A progressive decline in memory, thinking, and the ability to perform daily activities.

WHAT IS

dementia? 

100

Because many in this group lived through decades when openly expressing their identity was unsafe, they may hide important parts of their lives in care settings, leading to unique barriers in assessment and support.

Who are 

LGBTQ2S+ older adults?

100

It’s the situation in which an individual takes multiple medications at the same time, increasing the risk of adverse effects and interactions.

WHAT IS

Polypharmacy?

100

This type of intelligence relies on accumulated knowledge and experience, and tends to remain stable or even improve with age. 

WHAT IS

Crystallized intelligence?

100

This type of care can be offered at any stage of a serious illness and focuses on relief of symptoms, communication, and quality of life—whether or not the patient is expected to recover.

What is

palliative care? 

200

This pattern describes how some mental abilities, like processing speed and multitasking, decline with age while vocabulary, general knowledge, and life experience remain largely intact.

What is 

the classic aging pattern?

200

This major demographic shift has been driven by a large generation moving into older age and by people living longer than ever before.

What are the aging of the baby boom generation and increased longevity?

Also accepted:

What is gerontological explosion? 

200

Unlike acute pain, this type of pain lasts longer than expected healing time and often affects mood, sleep, and daily functioning.

WHAT IS

persistent pain? 

Also accepted:

What is chronic pain? 

200

A method where patients explain instructions back to the nurse to confirm understanding.

WHAT IS

Teach Back Method?

200

This type of care is chosen when a person is expected to die soon and the goal is comfort, not cure.

What is 

hospice care?

300

This acute condition is the most common cause of sudden confusion in older adults with infections such as UTIs.

WHAT IS

Delirium?

300

These unequal differences in outcomes for older adults often stem from lifelong social and economic disadvantages, limited access to care, and systemic biases that compound with age.

What are 

health disparities?

300

Because metabolism and kidney function slow with age, older adults are at higher risk for this when taking medications.

WHAT IS

an adverse reaction reaction?

300

This is the most critical element of the teach-back method, because it shows true understanding rather than memorization.

WHAT IS

having the patient explain the information in their own words?

300

This term describes an older adult’s preference to stay in their own home and community for as long as possible, rather than relocating to a facility.

WHAT IS

What is aging in place?

400

A common but often under-recognized condition marked by ongoing low mood and loss of interest in older adults.

WHAT IS

Depression?

400

This phrase captures the rapid expansion of the aging population due to longer life expectancy and declining birth rates.

WHAT IS

Gerontological explosion?

400

In older adults, this form of pain can be severe despite leaving no bruises, fractures, or vital-sign changes—and is often rooted in losses that can’t be seen on an assessment form.

What is 

psychological pain?

400

To support varying levels of health literacy in older adults, nurses should use this type of language when teaching.

WHAT IS

Plain language?

400

This condition may occur when an older adult moves to a new environment and begins showing anxiety, confusion, sleep problems, or a noticeable decline in daily functioning.

WHAT IS

Relocation stress syndrome?

500

In this condition, the earliest changes hide in plain sight: subtle losses in executive function and judgment that accumulate slowly enough to be rationalized by those around the person.

What is

Dementia?

500

Many older adults live with this type of long-term health condition that is not immediately life-threatening.  

What is 

A non-fatal chronic illness.

500

These medications increase fall risk because they can cause dizziness, drowsiness, or drops in blood pressure.

What are 

medications that affect the brain or blood pressure?

Also accepted:

sedatives, opioids, antidepressants, blood pressure meds.

500

These principles describe how older adults learn most effectively.

WHAT IS

Geragogy?

500

This approach prevents age-based assumptions in care by focusing on the older person’s personal history, values, and preferences rather than stereotypes about aging.

What is 

providing individualized, person-centered care?

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