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Beyond Rasouli: What has the Supreme Court said about Late-Stage Dementia and Continued Life-maintaining Treatment?

Beyond Rasouli: What has the Supreme Court said about Late-Stage Dementia and Continued Life-maintaining Treatment?

Teaser: 

Dr.Michael Gordon Michael Gordon, MD, MSc, FRCPC, Medical Program Director, Palliative Care, Baycrest Geriatric Health Care System, Professor of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON.

Abstract
With the rapidly increasing numbers of elders in North American Society, the prevalence of those living with dementia is clearly on the increase. According to the most recent document provided by the Alzheimer Society of Canada, The Rising Tide the growth in the numbers of those living with dementia will increase from 480,600 in 2008 (1.5% of Canada's population) to in the year 2038—1,125,200 people with dementia (2.8% of Canada's population).1 All the challenges that Canadian society faces with this growing population merely mirror the enormous complexities that those living with dementia, their families and health care professional providers must increasingly contend with. Government policy makers must find ways to address this increasing population in which Dementia plays a prominent role. The result of the Supreme Court ruling on the Rasouli case has major potential implication for those facing the later stages of dementia and those under whose care members of this population will be entrusted.
Key Words: dementia, aging population, substitute decision makers.

The Global Aging Phenomenon and Health Care

The Global Aging Phenomenon and Health Care

Teaser: 

Alexandre Kalache, MD, PhD,
Chief, Ageing and Life Course (ALC),
World Health Organization,
Geneva, Switzerland.

Ingrid Keller, MSc, MPH
Associate Professional Officer, ALC,
World Health Organization,
Geneva, Switzerland.


Introduction
Within the next few decades, one of the defining features of the world population will be the rapid increase in the absolute and relative numbers of older people in both developing and developed countries. We are currently at the threshold of global aging. Worldwide, the total number of older people--defined as those over 60 years of age--is expected to increase from 605 million in 2000, to 1.2 billion by the year 2025.1 Currently, approximately 60% of older persons live in the developing world, a number that is expected to increase to 75% (840 million) by the year 2025. Figure 1 shows the proportional increase of older persons among the total population for some developing countries as compared to the Canadian population.

In the year 2000, in a number of developed countries, there were, for the first time, more people aged 60 and older than there were children under the age of 14.1 Population aging could be compared with a silent revolution that will impact on all aspects of society. It is imperative that we are adequately prepared for it: the opportunities and the challenges are multiple.

Addressing the Health Care Needs of our Rapidly Aging Population

Addressing the Health Care Needs of our Rapidly Aging Population

Teaser: 

Honourable Minister Cam Jackson

Addressing the Health Care Needs of our Rapidly Aging Population
An Interview with the Hon. Cam Jackson, Ontario's Minister of Long-Term Care with Responsibility for Seniors

Olya Lechky

The Honourable Cam Jackson, Ontario's Minister of Long-Term Care with Responsibility for Seniors, has a personal interest in health issues that goes back to his boyhood days in Hamilton, Ontario. Born in this industrial city in February, 1951, of a Ukrainian-Canadian mother and Canadian father, he and his siblings saw firsthand the struggles of their parents to keep a large family healthy. "Raising a family of eight children in the fifties when there was no health insurance, no drug plan, no dental plan was challenging in the absence of this kind of support. I was impressed very early on with the importance of accessibility to health care. In those days, doctors still made house calls. Of course, things have changed tremendously since those days and people face different obstacles in accessing health care services."

After briefly pursuing a career in real estate development in his early twenties, Mr. Jackson decided to follow his true calling of serving the public.