Article

Juggling…they don’t call us the sandwich generation for nothing.

Topic: Biofeedback and NeurofeedbackPublished December 14, 2010

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,064 legacy views

Between the constant worrying a parent has for their children and young grandchildren, there is now the increasing worry we now have for our aging parents. It never dawned on me that this would become a concern. Growing up, our elderly grandparents lived nearby. Mine were in the same apartment building, and we saw them regularly. One parent was at home raising the kids, overseeing the household and tending to the grandparents’ needs. When they got old, they went to a nursing home. Boy, have things changed! Now there are dual-income families, grown children living at home longer and elderly parents who refuse to go to a nursing home. We offer them assisted living communities with wonderful activities and independent living with supportive services, but they insist on independence in their own apartment! We don’t seem to remember the day that we realized our parent’s health needed constant managing. We are no longer cooking dinner for ourselves and our husbands. We decide to cook our favorite meals for the masses so our grandchildren can take home pre packaged nutritious food to make our working children’s lives easier and also for our parents so they don’t forget to eat balanced meals and don’t have to go through the process of cooking at home for one. This is easier said than done. What about being there for everyone doctor’s appointment? There is no longer just the yearly physical we have to worry about. We want to be there for every milestone for our children and their childrens’ lives-like their babies’ 1 year check up and the first time our grandchild goes to the dentist. On top of that we need a separate calendar to manage our parents’ appointments. Yes, it is an outing, but do they need to see every single doctor every month? Between the podiatrist, the gastroenterologist, the cardiologist, the nephrologist, the rheumatologist…someone is bound to find something wrong with you! Then they request a laundry list of advanced tests to let us know that our 88 year old father has in fact a low bone density and should continue on his vitamin D supplements that he has been taking for the last 10 years. Thank you very much. And we are reminded by our parents that Medicare has covered the cost of everything. Isn’t it amazing that this has kept them busy for two and a half weeks….and don’t forget we start this process again next month. We wonder why the health care system is in trouble?

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

The main focus of drug carrier research today is to identify carriers that are both safe and effective for clinical treatment applications. As treatment strategies advance researchers regularly update drug delivery systems. Traditional drug delivery systems consist of liposomes and polymer micelles together with nanoparticles but despite their inclusion in clinical trials current versions still encounter limitations. Liposomes struggle to release hydrophobic drugs from their

March 26, 2025

Article

Traditional immunoassays based on the format of 96-well microtiter plates are widely used in analytical laboratories and have become increasingly automated with the introduction of robotics technology in recent years, thereby enhancing assay throughput. Most clinical analyzers essentially operate as "stand-alone laboratories," featuring precise, accurate, and highly reproducible programmatic liquid handling, sample addition, and washing steps. However, aside from cost, the si

March 26, 2025

Article

The History of ADC Drugs ADC drug history begins with "magic bullet". Physicians have long had high cytotoxic chemotherapy drugs for tumour treatment. As they target cancer cells, chemotherapeutics will also random attack healthy cells and become systemically toxic. Paul Ehrlich came up with the term "magic bullet" in 1913. He pictured fitting chemotherapy drugs on carriers that would shoot to tumour cells – as they do with missiles – to send them to tumor tissue so that

March 26, 2025

Article

The primary function of atrial natriuretic peptide ( ANP/a>) includes regulation of water and salt metabolism together with vascular volume which helps control blood pressure stability. Additionally, ANP manages endothelial cell permeability and counters the adrenal aldosterone system which allows it to control growth metabolism and influence myocardial hypertrophy and fibrosis regulation. Recent research shows that ANP and its receptors are present in several immune cells an

March 26, 2025