Chapter 4 key terms

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35 Terms

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Activities of daily living (ADLs)
Set of key capabilities used to evaluate need for personal care assistance for older adults or disabled persons; includes bathing, dressing, toileting, and self-feeding.
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Adult day care services
Program for the disabled or elderly who require health and/or support services; used to supplement home care services or a less costly option to being institutionalized.
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Aging Network Alzheimer's disease
System of federal, state, and local agencies committed to having older Americans live independently in their homes and communities.
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Area Agencies on Aging (AAAs)
One of 622 agencies nationwide with the purpose of providing resources and support for older adults; established in 1973.
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Assisted living facilities
Living facility primarily for seniors that provides meals, housekeeping, medication management, and other assistance with daily living activities as needed.
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Caregiving
The process of providing personal care services for a senior friend or family member who is physically or mentally disabled or is experiencing dementia.
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Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
Agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) that manages Medicare and Medicaid and strives to ensure effective, up-to-date healthcare coverage and to promote quality care for beneficiaries.
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Chronic diseases
Conditions that last one year or more and require ongoing medical attention. Limit activities of daily living; leading causes of death and disability include heart diseases, diabetes, and cancer.
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Continuing care community
Community or campus that allows residents to move from independent living to a skilled nursing facility as their needs change.
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Dementia
Decline in cognitive function that affects memory, language, and problem-solving skills; causes include poor heart health, smoking, brain injury, and some diseases of the brain, including Alzheimer disease and vascular dementia.
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Demographic
Related to characteristics of the population: age, gender, race, and ethnicity.
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Frail elderly
Physically weak patients of advanced age.
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Geriatricians
Primary care physicians who specialize in the care of those 65 years of age and older and focus on common health and social issues related to the aging process.
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Health literacy
The ability of an individual to obtain, process, and understand health information and services needed to make appropriate health decisions.
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Healthy People 2020
The office of disease Prevention and Health promotion within the U.S Department of Health and Human Services establishes health goals every decade and compares health data with goals.
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Home health agencies (HHAs)
Agencies that provide nursing and medical care in the patient's home.
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Instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs)
Complex self-care activities that are used to evaluate independence of disabled persons or older adults; examples are shopping, preparing meals, managing finances, and taking medications as prescribed.
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Intermediate care facilities for people with intellectual disability (ICF/ID)

A facility that provides personal care and social services

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Interprofessional Education (IPE)
Model for teaching students in the health professions about the roles and responsibilities of health professionals by functioning as a collaborative team during clinical.
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Long-term services and support (LTSS)
System of providing health and personal care support for the disabled, elderly, or others with chronic health problems in people's homes instead of an institution.
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Managed care organization (MCO)
Healthcare plan with established cost controls and designed to improve quality of care.
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Medicaid spousal impoverishment provisions
A program that allows for protection of a couple's financial resources so that a spouse can continue living in the community when his or her partner requires nursing home care.
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Medicare Advantage
When a private health insurance company contracts with Medicare to provide all Part A (hospital) and Part B (outpatient) benefits including prescription drugs.
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Medicare Supplemental Health Insurance
Health insurance purchased by Medicare beneficiaries to cover the cost of copayments for hospital and outpatient health services.
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National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS)
A division within the CDC that collects data on factors contributing to health risks.
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Old-old
Those over 85 years of age.
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1973 Older Americans Act (OAA)
An addition to a program established by the U.S. Congress in 1965 to provide resources and support for the elderly, enacted primarily to create the Area Agency on Aging.
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Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 (OBRA 87)
A law passed by Congress that required Medicare and Medicaid Standards and certification procedures for long term care facilities to merge; ICF/ID standards were upgraded to be the same as skilled care facilities.
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Preadmission Screening and Resident Review (PASRR)
Screening for mental illness or intellectual disability required for all admissions to Medicaid-certified nursing homes.
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Program for All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE)
Program that provides comprehensive preventive, primary, acute, and long-term care services so older individuals with chronic care needs can continue living in their local community.
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Residential Care Communities
See assisted-living facilities.
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Senior centers
Focal point for services and referrals to resources for the elderly; funded by the federal government as a result of the Older Americans Act.
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Skilled nursing facility (SNF)
A nursing home that provides the level of care closest to hospital care.
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Supplemental insurance
For older adults and the disabled.
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U.S. Administration on Aging (AOA)
Division within HHS agency, Administration for Community Living: Provides a variety of home-and community-based services for older adults and disabled persons.