Portacolone E
Care Wkly. 2018;2018:1-4.
A sociologist's encounters with a retired executive living alone with Alzheimer's disease reveal gaps in the U.S. healthcare system. These gaps emerge during eight ethnographic interviews and participant observation between 2014 and 2017 with Ms. Judith Banks, 79. Ms. Banks' perspective offers an inside-view of the challenges of living alone with cognitive impairment. Receiving a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease was "brutal" for her and the support to continue living in the community almost non-existent. Gaps in the U.S. healthcare system further emerge from the contrast between Ms. Banks' case study and the examination of the Danish system of care for non-institutionalized persons with dementia. Given that one third of people with dementia live alone in the U.S. and that they are likely to experience poorer health outcomes than counterparts living with others, it is critical to ensure that they receive appropriate health services upon diagnosis of cognitive impairment.
一位社会学家与一位患有阿尔茨海默病的退休高管的接触揭示了美国医疗保健系统存在的漏洞。这些漏洞是在2014年至2017年期间对79岁的朱迪思·班克斯女士进行的八次人种志访谈和参与观察中发现的。班克斯女士的观点提供了一个关于认知障碍患者独居挑战的内部视角。对她来说,被诊断出患有阿尔茨海默病是“残酷的”,而继续在社区生活几乎得不到任何支持。美国医疗保健系统的漏洞还体现在班克斯女士的案例研究与丹麦非机构化痴呆症患者护理体系的对比中。鉴于美国三分之一的痴呆症患者独居,而且他们可能比与他人同住的患者健康状况更差,确保他们在被诊断出认知障碍后能获得适当的医疗服务至关重要。