Tag: behaviors

Dementia, Restraints, and the Regs

Healthcare Association of Hawaii is hosting this webinar. Providing care to those living with dementia in nursing facility settings can be complex and rewarding. Having an understanding of various approaches to deal with challenging behaviors is important and impactful to the resident’s quality of life.

Best practice standards indicate that dementia behaviors should be managed without the use of physical or chemical restraints; however, when they are deemed necessary staff members must have knowledge of current CMS regulations and documentation requirements. The interdisciplinary team must make efforts to reduce psychotropic drug use as appropriate and provide compassionate and person-centered care in compliance with regulatory standards.

Join us as we examine strategies to manage challenging behaviors from those living with dementia and discuss physical and chemical restraints, documentation standards, interdisciplinary approaches, and maintaining quality of life in accordance with regulatory compliance.

Learning Objectives

1. Define and describe consequences of physical and chemical restraints
2. Identify strategies to mitigate physical restraint use
3. Describe CMS regulatory requirements related to psychotropic drug use
4. Explore how to apply practice strategies to facilitate the reduction of psychotropic drug use

Target Audience

Interdisciplinary team members working in post-acute and long-term care settings

Speaker: Aida Wen, MD, CMD, Geriatrician and Associate Professor, University of Hawaii at Manoa, John A. Burns School of Medicine

Understanding and Responding to Dementia Behaviors: Caregiver Conference

This full day in-person conference (with Zoom link available) is for unpaid family and friend caregivers who are caring for someone with memory loss or dementia. This event will feature information about dementia and behavioral symptom management given by expert geriatricians — as well as insight and practical tips from an experienced dementia care trainer of Teepa Snow’s Positive Approach to Dementia Care (PAC) program. The presenters will cover:

  • Overview of dementia: causes and prevalence
  • Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of dementia (BPSD)
  • Benefits and importance of professional assessment and accurate diagnosis for the person experiencing memory loss and for those providing care
  • Working as a team with healthcare providers for optimal quality of life
  • Managing BPSD: Geriatricians’ and Neurogistʻs Perspectives
  • Emotional and Physical needs of people living with dementia that can lead to challenging behaviors
  • Understanding and responding to behaviors as dementia progresses: practical tips for unpaid family caregivers
  • Tips and Best Practices for Communication, Safety and Environmental Adjustments

Presenters:

Dr. Kamal Masaki is Professor and Chair of the Department of Geriatric Medicine at the John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, which is a John A. Hartford Foundation Center of Excellence in Geriatrics (one of 25 in the U.S.). She also serves as Academic Medical Director for Geriatrics at the Queen’s University Medical Group, and Director of Research at Kuakini Medical Center. She is board certified in Internal Medicine and Geriatric Medicine. She was elected to be a Fellow of the American Geriatrics Society. She has been doing aging and dementia research for over 35 years. Dr. Masaki has received numerous teaching and research awards, and was selected by Hawaii physicians to “The Best Doctors in America” 3 times. She is a co-author on over 325 publications in scientific journals.

Dr. Abraham Chyung, MD-PhD, is an Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine at the John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai’i. He is a board certified neurologist specializing in memory disorders at the Neuroscience Institute, Queen’s Medical Center. His professional ambition is to make Alzheimer’s disease treatment available to the Kupuna community of Hawai’i. Towards that end, he has partnered with many groups like Catholic Charities Hawai’i, Alzheimer’s Association, The Queen’s Health Systems leadership, Primary Care doctors, Geriatrics Specialists, Mental Health specialists, and caregivers. He appreciates the support of everyone who shares the vision of making accessible early detection, diagnosis, and treatment to those afflicted by Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias.

Jessica Barry, MD has been working at The Queen’s Medical Center Geriatric Services for 15 years. Born and raised in Kansas, she attended University of Kansas for undergraduate and medical school. Her Internal Medicine Residency was at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. Her Geriatric Fellowship was with University of Hawaii John A. Burns School of Medicine. She aims to keep her older patients independent as long as possible while maintaining an optimal quality of life with proactive prevention, early diagnosis, and targeted treatment. She and her husband from Hawaii have two children. She is passionate about dementia education for lay persons and health professionals. In her free time, she ferries the children to their activities and squeezes in running and reading novels.

Dorothy Colby is a Certified Positive Approach to Care™ (PAC)Trainer and national Mentor, with more than 25 years of professional and personal experience caring for people with dementia and training caregivers. The PAC trainings created by Teepa Snow share dementia care techniques that provide essential information for unpaid and professional caregivers on how to have a positive and meaningful relationship with loved ones living with all forms of dementia. Dorothy is Director of Community Engagement for Hale Kuʻike Memory Care Homes at Nuʻuanu, Bayside & Pali locations.

For those who wish to attend in person, lunch and printed handouts will be provided. Parking charges will be $5 per vehicle with conference center validation.
Please NOTE: In-person attendance is limited. We will prioritize unpaid family and friend caregivers of someone living with dementia.

Parking instructions and directions will be sent to registrants who plan to attend in person. Printed handouts of the slides will be provided that morning.
All registrants will receive a link to a digital copy of the slides and program agenda, prior to June 10.

This free training is sponsored by Catholic Charities Hawaii, and supported, in part by Alzheimer’s Disease Programs Initiative grant number 90ADPI0108-01-00, from the U.S. Administration for Community Living, DHHS, Washington, D.C. 20201.

Sorry, there are no CEs or Certificates available for this presentation.

Managing Cognitive and Behavioral Symptoms in Aging

Presenter: Brett Y. Lu, M.D.,PhD, Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry, University of Hawaiʻi, Psychiatrist, Queens Medical Center

At the end of this session, physicians will be able to:

  1. Be more familiar with modifiable risk factors for cognitive/behavioral symptoms in aging.
  2. Become more aware with behavioral symptoms that may require medical intervention.
  3. Manage behavioral symptoms more effectively and safely, particularly in those with dementia.

Intended Audiences: Physicians, nurses, and other allied health staff caring for geriatric patients.

 

This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the accreditation requirements and policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) through the joint providership of The Queen’s Medical Center and the University of Hawaii John A. Burns School of Medicine. The Queen’s Medical Center is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

The Queen’s Medical Center designates this live activity for a maximum of 1.0 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

Safety First: Understanding and Responding to Dementia Behaviors

Catholic Charities Hawaii (CCH) is offering another Zoom workshop focusing on Dementia-Related Behaviors that can be challenging for caregivers and providers of persons living with dementia in the community. This session will target unpaid caregivers of persons living with dementia in the community and the service providers, friends & family, neighbors, educators, and advocates who support them. These workshops are made possible by a grant given to Catholic Charities Hawaii from the U.S. Administration for Community Living/DHHS for the Alzheimer’s Disease Programs Initiative awarded to organizations across the country to increase resources and information to improve the well-being of persons living with dementia in the community and their caregivers. 

The workshop will cover:

    • Benefits of working as a team with healthcare and community resources through all stages of dementia
    • Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of dementia and why safety comes first
    • What the caregiver can do to help increase safety at home for their person living with dementia
    • Fall prevention and dementia, assessing and modifying the environment
    • Wandering issues: tips for environmental changes, safety in and out of the home
    • Dining and Safety: being prepared for possible swallowing difficulties and nutrition/hydration challenges
    • Alzheimer’s Association, Hawaii Chapter statewide resources, programs and education 

Expert Panel Presenters:

Jessica Barry, MD has been working at The Queen’s Medical Center Geriatric Services for 15 years. Born and raised in Kansas, she attended University of Kansas for undergraduate and medical school. Her Internal Medicine Residency was at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. Her Geriatric Fellowship was with University of Hawaii John A. Burns School of Medicine. She aims to keep her older patients independent as long as possible while maintaining an optimal quality of life with proactive prevention, early diagnosis, and targeted treatment. She and her husband from Hawaii have two children. She is passionate about dementia education for lay persons and health professionals. In her free time, she ferries the children to their activities and squeezes in running and reading novels.

Ivy K. Castallanos is the Director of Programs with the Alzheimer’s Association, Hawaii Chapter. She holds a Master’s degree in Behavioral Science and Health Education from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and has more than 20 years’ experience in the combined areas of health education, health promotion and disease prevention, health equity, and corporate wellness. She has served in roles with organizations such as HMSA, the American Heart Association, and HealthAssist, and has held research positions with the Johns Hopkins Center for Cancer Pain Research and the Welch Center for Prevention, Epidemiology, and Clinical Research in Baltimore, Maryland. Ivy joined the Alzheimer’s Association in 2014 and finds joy in empowering families affected by dementia. She is a full-time mom of two and a full-time caregiver for her mother.

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