In five pages these two types of care approaches for senior citizens are contrasted and compared in terms of their similarities, differences, and what each seeks to emphasize. Four sources are cited in the bibliography.
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in short-term verses long-term care for our nations elderly. There are also many similarities, however. With the growing elderly population and the changes in our familial lifestyles we
as a nation are faced with a number of societal complexities which we havent experienced at any other time in our histories. Partially as a result of improved
heath care practices which result in longer life and partially as the result of the movement away from the nuclear family of yesterday, the elderly now represent a substantial percentage
of the population which is considered most at need in the U.S. These needs include both short-term nursing care in the face of an acute illness and long-term care
in the face of chronic illnesses or the simple physiological and sociological effects of aging.
Body Short-term care of the elderly is typically designed to address a specific problem such as the physiological manifestations of disease or injury.
Long-term care, however, typically revolves a multitude of considerations. Each type of care addresses the reality that as we grow older our bodies begin to simply wear out.
The modern marvels of medicine can patch up many of our creaks and groans, it can even switch out new organs for old, but there are many other factors
associated with aging for which medicine yet has no cure. While short-term medical care can resolve a variety of physiological problems, or at least make them more bearable, in
far too many cases our elderly simply learn to live and bear it. Short-term care does have its limitations, therefore. Sometimes they are in a considerable amount of
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