Aging with Grace
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Aging with Grace

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Aging with Grace

The actress Bette Davis once remarked that “growing old is not for sissies.” In trying to plan for one’s elderhood, there are lots of matters that need to be considered. With the Aging with Grace series, the Hope and Healing Center & Institute (HHCI) is providing an overview in four different areas: Health Care Rights and Responsibilities, Legal Considerations, Understanding Living Options, and Paying for Aging. If you are under the age of fifty, don’t dismiss these matters because of your youth – not only is planning important, some of our parents need help in addressing aging matters. If you have already made plans, this is a good time to review these areas.

Specific content for each of the presentations in HHCI’s Aging with Grace program series includes:

  • Health Care Rights and Responsibilities – as a patient. When you go to a new doctor or hospital, you are given information about your rights and responsibilities as a patient? When was the last time you read this document? We will review some of the key features of advance directives, as well as explain ways that you can assure that your health care wishes will be followed.
  • Legal Considerations – Aging brings the reminder that we need to consider the legacies of our earthly possessions. If you do not make a plan, the state of Texas has one for you, which may not agree with your own wishes. In addition, there are other legal considerations of aging. It is important to understand these, as well as understand other documents that may be needed as we age.
  • Understanding Living Options – Studies show that most of us prefer to remain in our own homes as we age, but we may need help to do so or may need to consider alternatives. We will present the different living options for seniors, including considerations for obtaining help inside and outside the home, including approximate costs.
  • Paying for Aging – Aging comes with its own challenging financial issues considering costs and income needs for everything from living arrangements to possible elder care. Individuals and families will learn how to define their financial goals and execute them, and will present some of the considerations in paying for our golden years.

GTHU launched the Aging with Grace course. Whether you’re planning for your own future or supporting aging loved ones, this course will empower you with the essential tools and knowledge.

Learn more and start your journey today to deepen your knowledge of these important topics. https://learn.gthu.org/en/courses/aging-with-grace/

Written by
Peggy Determeyer, PhD Director of HHCI CARES and McGee Fellow in Bioethics and Aging at the Hope and Healing Center & Institute. A retired board-certified chaplain, Dr. Peggy Determeyer received her PhD in the Medical Humanities with a concentration in Health Care Ethics and Policy from the Institute for the Medical Humanities at the University of Texas Medical Branch – Galveston. Her dissertation examined ways that Community Bioethics Dialogues can be used to promote individualized personal decisions and advance care planning. Peggy believes that all of us are or will be users of health care, and need opportunities to talk about our issues and experiences. In the Dialogues, community members engage in discussions about a variety of health care topics, including treatment outcomes, mental illness and aging, and end-of-life decision making in facilitated groups using readings, guest speakers, and participant stories. As the McGee Fellow in Bioethics and Aging, Peggy develops and offers programs and training for health care professionals, pastors, and others to provide humane, compassionate care for those who are ill and/or aging as well as offer support for family members. She hosts a monthly information session, Café CHANGE (Conversations on Health and Navigating Good Elderhood), and leads a monthly Grief Support Group (second Tuesdays of the month). As the director of HHCI CARES, Peggy is also developing an ethics consultation service for community members facing health care planning issues. Peggy and her husband have two grown children and three spoiled cats. Together, they enjoy kayaking, sailing, and traveling, while downtime will find Peggy with a book, sometimes with one of the aforementioned cats in her lap!
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