Nurse and volunteer Ana Kanellos, left, demonstrates home caregiving techniques on Liz Dunnebacke, executive director of Wake, during the free Community Deathcare Provider Training at the Healing ...
People who help sick, aging loved ones are at risk for physical illness themselves. There may be ways to improve their resilience ...
Wandering, and "elopement," are frightening and dangerous behaviors by people with dementia. For some families, it is the point when they begin to seek institutional care for their loved one.
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I cover tax, budget and retirement policy from Washington The typical family caregiver is a 50-something woman who spends 27 hours ...
Dick Halverson served as pastor of Fourth Presbyterian Church in Washington, D. C., for almost twenty-three years. During that time, he built a ministry of being with people, and spent a large ...
Statesman charity program's nonprofit partners will be able to help hundreds of families throughout Central Texas with ...
It all started with a manikin. When training her Yale School of Nursing (YSN) students in clinical skills, Christine Rodriguez will often use the human-shaped models in simulated health care ...
Bilal Arshadullah ’24 was a 2023-’24 Health Care Ethics Intern and the inaugural recipient of the Fellowship in Health Equity and Innovation with the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara ...
Cancer caregiving can be taxing in many ways, from physical to emotional, as well as on the caregiver's time and resources. Here's how to help prevent burnout getty According to the American Cancer ...
Liz Dunnebacke isn’t dying, but for a recent end-of-life care workshop in New Orleans, she pretended to be. Dunnebacke lay still atop a folding table that was dressed as a bed, complaining that her ...
Liz Dunnebacke isn’t dying, but for a recent end-of-life care workshop in New Orleans, she pretended to be. Dunnebacke lay still atop a folding table that was dressed as a bed, complaining that her ...
Liz Dunnebacke isn’t dying, but for a recent end-of-life care workshop in New Orleans, she pretended to be. Dunnebacke lay still atop a folding table that was dressed as a bed, complaining that her ...