sbet The Challenges of Health Care for the Elderly

To the Editor:
Re “The Decline in Geriatric Care Hurts Us All,” by Pamela Paul (column, Jan. 17):
The blame for the relegation of geriatricians to the bottom of the medical specialty hierarchy resides with ourselves. We are a consumer society, after all. Where there is demand, a wealth of choice reigns.
But as Ms. Paul writes, elder care is seen as profoundly unglamorous, even repellent. The helplessness of babies and the old are similar, but how starkly different are the reactions. We do not rush to nursing homes as we do to maternity wards. As a modern society, as human beings, we have far to go to realize the gift of being with our elderly as the joy it is.
Deborah PlumerBrooklyn
To the Editor:
There is much to be done to give all of us access to quality medical care as we age.
The government can increase Medicare reimbursement rates to ensure fair compensation for geriatric services, to encourage more providers to accept older patients. Private funders can support medical schools to provide scholarships, loan repayment and grants to encourage specialization in geriatrics. Medical and health professional schools can infuse geriatrics into their required curriculums. The National Institutes of Health can increase funding for research into the basic biology of aging and new approaches to age-related chronic diseases.
Finally, we must fight inaccurate,plusph ageist and all-too-common views in health care about older adults. That will provide the foundation for delivering the kind of care to allow all of us, as we age, to make needed contributions to our families, communities and nation.
Stephanie LedermanJames ApplebyMs. Lederman is executive director of the American Federation for Aging Research in New York. Mr. Appleby is chief executive officer of the Gerontological Society of America in Washington.
We are having trouble retrieving the article content.
Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.
Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.
The firm, City Safe Partners, received a $154 million contract from the New York City Housing Authority in January 2024 to provide “emergency fire watch services” in Brooklyn, Manhattan and the Bronx, records show. Sheena Wright, the first deputy mayor in the Adams administration and the fiancée of Mr. Banks’s brother, the schools chancellor, sits on the housing authority’s board and voted to approve the emergency contract, records show.
free online slot machinesA sale to Qualcomm would present huge hurdles:
Thank you for your patience while we verify access.
Already a subscriber? Log in.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.sbet
Latest News
- 2025-03-23sbet The Challenges of Health Care for the Elderly
- 2025-03-04sbet West Indies Vs Australia Live Streaming And Toss Update, International Masters League: Brian Lara's Men Bowl First - Check Playing 11s
- 2025-03-03sbet Gaza Ceasefire: Talks On Hold As Phase 1 Nears End; Israeli Tanks Move Into West Bank | What We Know
- 2025-03-02sbet IND Vs PAK, Champions Trophy: Landmark Kohli Ton Puts India On Top In Group A - Data Debrief
- 2025-02-28sbet Australia Vs England, Champions Trophy: Josh Inglis Describes Century Against ENG As 'His Finest Innings'