首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
When Mom and Dad Grow Old [A]The prospect of talking to increasingly fragile parents about their future can be "one of the most
When Mom and Dad Grow Old [A]The prospect of talking to increasingly fragile parents about their future can be "one of the most
admin
2019-09-18
55
问题
When Mom and Dad Grow Old
[A]The prospect of talking to increasingly fragile parents about their future can be "one of the most difficult challenges adult children will ever face," says Clarissa Green, a Vancouver therapist. "People often tell me they don’t want to raise sensitive issues with their parents about bringing in caregivers or moving," she says. "They’ll say, ’I don’t want to see Dad cry.’" But Green usually responds, "What’s wrong with that?" Adult children, she says, need to try to join their parents in grieving their decline, acknowledge their living arrangements may no longer work and, if necessary, help them say goodbye to their beloved home. "It’s sad. And it’s supposed to be. It’s about death itself."
[B]There are almost four million men and women over age 65 in Canada. Nearly two thirds of them manage to patch together enough support—from family, friends, private and government services—to live independently until virtually the day they die, according to Statistics Canada.
[C]Of the Canadian seniors who live to 85 and over, almost one in three end up being moved—sometimes kicking—to group living for the last years of their lives. Even in the best-case scenarios(可能出现的情况), such dislocations can bring sorrow. "Often the family feels guilty, and the senior feels abandoned," says Charmaine Spencer, a professor in the gerontology department of Simon Eraser University. Harassed with their own careers and children, adult children may push their parents too fast to make a major transition.
[D]Val MacDonald, executive director of the B.C. Seniors Services Society, cautions adult children against imposing their views on aging parents. "Many baby boomers can be quite patronizing(高人一等的)," she says. Like many who work with seniors, MacDonald suggests adult children devote many conversations over a long period of time to collaborating on their parents’ future, raising feelings, questions and options—gently, but frankly. However, many middle-aged adults, according to the specialists, just muddle(应付)through with their aging parents.
[E]When the parents of Nancy Woods of Mulmur Hills, Ont., were in their mid-80s, they made the decision to downsize from their large family home to an apartment in Toronto. As Woods’s parents, George and Bernice, became frailer, she believed they knew she had their best interests at heart. They agreed to her suggestion to have Meals on Wheels start delivering lunches and dinners. However, years later, after a crisis, Woods discovered her parents had taken to throwing out the prepared meals. Her dad had appreciated them, but Bernice had come to believe they were poisoned. "My father was so loyal," says Woods, "he had hid that my mother was overwhelmed by paranoia(偏执狂)." To her horror, Woods discovered her dad and mom were "Irving on crackers and oatmeal porridge" and were weakening from the impoverished diet Her dad was also falling apart with the stress of providing for Bernice—a common problem when one spouse tries to do everything for an ailing partner. "The spouse who’s being cared for might be doing well at home," says Spencer, "but often the other spouse is burned out and ends up being hospitalized."
[F]Fortunately, outside help is often available to people struggling through the often-distressing process of helping their parents explore an important shift. Sons and daughters can bring in brochures or books on seniors’ issues, as well as introduce government health-care workers or staff at various agencies, to help raise issues and open up discussions, says Val MacDonald, whose nonprofit organization responds to thousands of calls a year from British Columbians desperate for information about how to weave through the dizzying array of seniors services and housing options. The long list of things to do, says MacDonald, includes assessing their ability to live independently: determining your comfort level with such things as bathing a parent: discussing with all household members whether it would be healthy for an elderly relative to move in: monitoring whether, out of pure duty, you’re overcommitting yourself to providing a level of care that could threaten your own well-being.
[G]The shock phone call that flung Nancy Woods and her parents into action came from her desperate dad. "I got this call from my father that he couldn’t cope anymore. My mother was setting fires in the apartment," she says. "He didn’t want to see it for what it was. Up to then he’d been in denial."
[H]Without knowing she was following the advice of experts who recommend using outside sources to stimulate frank discussion with parents, Woods grabbed a copy of The 36-Hour Day: A Family Guide to Caring for Persons With Alzheimer Disease, Related Dementing Illnesses, and Memory Loss in Later Life. She read sections of the book to her dad and asked him, "Who does that sound like?" Her father replied, "It’s Mother. It’s dementia(痴呆)." At that point, Woods said, her dad finally recognized their tragic plight. She told her father she would help them move out of their apartment. "He nodded. He didn’t yell or roar. He took it on the chin(忍受痛苦)."
[I]Woods regrets that she "had not noticed small details signalling Mom’s dementia." But she’s satisfied her dad accepted his passage into a group residence, where he and his wife could stay together in a secure unit where staff were trained to deal with patients with dementia. "From the moment they moved into the Toronto nursing home, their physical health improved. On the other hand, it was the beginning of the end in terms of their mental abilities. Perhaps they couldn’t get enough stimulation. Perhaps it was inevitable."
[J]After my father died in 2002, the grim reality of my mother’s sharply declining memory set in starkly. With her expanding dementia, Mom insisted on staying in her large North Shore house, even though she was confused about how to cook, organize her day or take care of herself. For the next three years we effectively imposed decisions on her, most of them involving bringing in caregivers, including family members. In 2005 Mom finally agreed, although she barely knew what was happening, to move to a nearby nursing home, where, despite great confusion, she is happier.
[K]As Spencer says, the sense of dislocation that comes with making an important passage can be "a very hard adjustment for a senior at the best of times. But it’s worse if it’s not planned out."
According to Statistics Canada, most seniors over sixty-five try to get support from various sources to live independently until they die.
选项
答案
B
解析
根据题目中的Statistics Canada和over sixty-five定位至B段。本题句子概括了该段内容。题目中的get support from various sources与原文中的patch together enough support对应,live independently until they die则是原文信息再现。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/rAW7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteanessayonuniversitystudents’physicalhealth.Youressayshouldfocuson
黄山(MountHuang)位于安徽省黄山市,取自“黄帝之山”之意。黄山是世界自然和文化双遗产,也是中国最著名的国家级风景区之一。黄山集中国各大名山的美景于一身,以奇松、怪石、云海、温泉“四绝”著称于世。它不仅景色雄伟俏丽,而且资源丰富、生态完整,具有重
Throughoutevolution,humanshavebeenactive.Ourancestorschasedpreyashunter-gatherersand【C1】______frompredators.Morer
Throughoutevolution,humanshavebeenactive.Ourancestorschasedpreyashunter-gatherersand【C1】______frompredators.Morer
Throughoutevolution,humanshavebeenactive.Ourancestorschasedpreyashunter-gatherersand【C1】______frompredators.Morer
"Theworld’senvironmentissurprisinglyhealthy.Discuss."Ifthatwereanexaminationtopic,moststudentswouldtearitapart
AstudyconductedbyanAustralianscienceagencyhasdiscoveredsignsthatthecountry’sancientAboriginesmayhavebeenthew
Highstreetshopsuseavarietyofmeanstoattractshoppers,suchasstrikingwindowdisplays,hugered"Sale"signsandspecia
BargainbookshoppersmusthavebeenpleasedlookingatAmazon’sbestsellerlistthisweekend:Theonlinebooksellerhaddropped
ReformandMedicalCosts[A]Americansaredeeplyconcernedabouttherelentlessriseinhealthcarecostsandhealthinsurancep
随机试题
[*]
患者经治1周后,身热已退,黄疸减轻,呕吐止,唯胁肋隐痛,脘痞腹胀,食少口干苦,小便赤苔腻,脉弦数。
老年人合理的饮食结构中下列哪些项是对的
某养殖户饲养蛋鸡四千多羽,时有体况肥胖的母鸡突然死亡,产蛋率从75%~85%下降至45%~55%或更低。病鸡喜卧,腹大而软松下垂,冠、髯苍白。重病者嗜睡、瘫痪,一般从出现症状到死亡1~2d,有的病例在数小时内即死亡。剖检:病鸡的皮下、腹腔、肠系膜表面有脂肪
A.升膜式蒸发器B.降膜式蒸发器C.刮板式薄膜蒸发器D.离心式薄膜蒸发器E.管式蒸发器利用高速旋转的转子,将药液刮布成均匀薄膜而进行蒸发,适用于易结垢料液
设直线方程为x=y-1=z,平面方程为x-2y+x=0,则直线与平面:
一个城市的建设发展,如果说建筑是她的脊梁,环境是她的容貌,那市民的文明素质就是她的________。而文化作为承载文明的基石,特别是当跨越时空的优秀传统文化理念、价值标准、审美风范被重新________,转化为现代人们的精神追求和行为养成时,那她_____
在形式意义上,世界上大多数国家的宪法属于()(2011年非法学综合课单选第22题)
表名为Employee的表结构是(职工号,姓名,工资),建立表Employee的SQL命令是
Theprofessorfoundhimselfconstantly______thequestion;Howcouldanyonedothesethings?
最新回复
(
0
)