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BrainMatters - Fall/Winter 2018

Baycrest Health Sciences & Baycrest Foundation Publications

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14 BrainMatters FALL/WINTER 2018 DONOR-SUPPORTED programs advance health and well-being B aycrest is celebrating its 100th anniversary. The organization got its start when members of the community raised funds to create the original Toronto Jewish Old Folks Home in 1918. Over the years, it grew to include the Apotex Centre, Jewish Home for the Aged, a large geriatric hospital, the Rotman Research Institute, assisted living home and a centre for education that trains more than 1,100 students a year. All these decades later, donors are imbued with the same spirit of generosity and dedication to making Baycrest a better place and a world leader in the brain health and aging sector. Here are few projects and programs that are making a difference: VIRTUAL WINDOW INTO THE HOME Baycrest is making inroads into the future of healthcare for older adults with a range of innovations. For example, videoconferencing technologies are harnessed to provide an extra level of service to older adults in the community. In the past, a geriatrician would complete a comprehensive assessment in a patient's home and make recommendations that required follow-up. A gift from Gabi Weisfeld has allowed Baycrest to purchase new laptops, webcams, a stethoscope with a computer hookup and other equipment, as well as hire a telemedicine nurse for these follow-ups and other virtual visits. The nurse arranges a video call in the patient's home with the geriatrician who is at the office and can see how the patient is progressing with treatment and recommend next steps. The technology is also useful in assessing the home environments of outpatients. "When patients came to see us in the day treatment centre, we used to wonder 'Did they fall because it is hard for them to get out of bed?' or 'Are they remembering to buy groceries?'" said clinical manager Jagger Smith. Patients are trained to use a videoconference device and display parts of the home that the clinicians want to see. With a virtual window into the home, the team has been able to make simple but powerful changes. One woman couldn't get in and out of bed safely because the bed was on the floor. The social worker found her a bed frame. A look into the fridge of another patient found that it was almost empty. The team made arrangements with the patient's family to establish a meal routine. The technology has also been used to grant a hospital patient's dying wish. The man wanted to see his home one last time but was too ill to make the visit. With the patient's permission, the outreach team used videoconferencing equipment to provide a tour of his home. REDUCING UNNECESSARY HOSPITAL VISITS The Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care says that on average, 30 per cent of visits to emergency from long-term care homes are potentially avoidable. The consequences to elders transferred from a long- term care home can be especially dire – they can face long waits before they receive attention and risk further illness from prolonged exposure to other sick patients in the waiting room. That's why Baycrest's Apotex Centre, Jewish Home for the Aged, the largest long-term care home in Ontario, is making a determined effort to reduce unnecessary hospital visits for our 472 residents. Gabi and Louis Weisfeld

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