Aging in the U.S. (full documentary) | FRONTLINE

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FRONTLINE PBS | Official

FRONTLINE PBS | Official

Күн бұрын

A powerful and intimate look at the realities of aging in America and the burgeoning population of people who are 85+ years old. (Aired 2006)
This journalism is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station here: www.pbs.org/donate​.
When the documentary “Living Old” was released, people over 85 were the fastest growing segment of the U.S. population. While medical advances enabled an unprecedented number of Americans to live longer and healthier lives, the documentary examined how this new longevity also had unintended consequences.
For millions of Americans, living longer also came to mean serious chronic illness and a protracted physical decline that could require an immense amount of care, often for years and sometimes even decades. Yet as the need for care started rising, the number of available caregivers dwindled. With families more dispersed and an overburdened healthcare system, many experts feared the country was on the threshold of a major crisis in care.
“Living Old” was a FRONTLINE co-production with Mead Street Films. The documentary was written, produced and directed by Miri Navasky and Karen O’Connor. The executive producer of FRONTLINE was David Fanning.
Explore additional reporting on "Living Old" on our website:
www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/do...
#Documentary #Aging #ElderCare
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FRONTLINE is produced at GBH in Boston and is broadcast nationwide on PBS. Funding for FRONTLINE is provided through the support of PBS viewers and by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Additional funding is provided by the Abrams Foundation; Park Foundation; the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation; and the FRONTLINE Journalism Fund with major support from Jon and Jo Ann Hagler on behalf of the Jon L. Hagler Foundation, and additional support from Koo and Patricia Yuen.
CHAPTERS:
Prologue - 00:00
Aging in America: Living Longer But With Chronic Diseases - 1:17
A Looming Crisis in Elder Care - 8:56
Nursing Homes, Independence and Family Caregivers - 17:33
Caring for Elders and Dealing With Death - 24:20
Weighing Medical Procedures and Quality of Life - 35:22
Long-term Care and End of Life Decisions - 44:45
Credits - 53:11

Пікірлер: 4 100
@frontline
@frontline 9 ай бұрын
As "Living Old" becomes newly available on our channel, America’s geriatric population is still growing and still facing many of the same challenges. READ MORE: www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/article/aging-living-old-geriatrician-shortage/
@VeganDNAgeneticInheritance
@VeganDNAgeneticInheritance 9 ай бұрын
Please humans should stop having kids no matter what. Our potential offsprings deserve better than this life. Nobody deserve to suffer like this worse than any injustices ❤ as the solar system age, the planet ages, even if humans keep passing seeds onto consequent generations the quality of life is degrading with technology emissions, radiation etc.
@masudsaleh5155
@masudsaleh5155 9 ай бұрын
​@@AnonymousanonymousAFor all of those who think it is ideal if Muslim women are not financially dependent on men: Would it be ideal if Muslim men were not sexually dependent on their women? For example would it be ideal if men could purchase (at low cost) harems of docile life-like forever-young sex robots? How would you respond to Muslim men who justified this by saying such robots are necessary to give men true independence, such that they are not forced to stay in relationships with women who are rude, jealous, controlling, manipulative, fat, old, or ugly? How would you respond to Muslim men who said that Muslim women need to "step up their game" such that men choose to be with them instead of a robot that is more friendly, beautiful, young, and thin? The cop out answer is to say sex robots are haram, but there are other conceivable halal alternatives that would do the same thing: flood men with cheap alternatives. Obviously such alternatives would weaken and ultimately destroy marriage because it takes away the dependence that men have on women for sex. But that is literally what giving women financial independence does; it makes them independent from men. And that's why no society or religion ever did give women that independence, except for our current dystopia.
@DX-d
@DX-d 9 ай бұрын
This is a horrific video of some deviant monsters implying that we should annihilate old people in the disguise to spare them from their suffering, when in fact to get rid of their burden.
@pattysouza2954
@pattysouza2954 9 ай бұрын
​@@DX-dYou are absolutely right.
@frannypalmer2726
@frannypalmer2726 9 ай бұрын
COVID and nursing homes, and some governors did nefarious things to a lot of the elderly. Sickening.
@pattyk734
@pattyk734 9 ай бұрын
My 94 year old father lived at home and got to die,probably from a stroke, in front of his TV watching Judge Judy. My brother found him soon after he died because he was still a little warm and his coffee was hot. Good for you Dad.
@theriv132
@theriv132 9 ай бұрын
That's the dream!
@Adrianafaith123
@Adrianafaith123 9 ай бұрын
I'm sure Judy was on high volume too🤠
@2NDCBT
@2NDCBT 9 ай бұрын
My Grandfather passed away almost the same way! Feet up on the ottoman watching CNN. When I was in his apartment to clean up everything days later, I turned on the stereo and "I will leave you softly" by Frank Sinatra started to play. I sat down and cried my eyes out!
@user-sc9lr6kz8t
@user-sc9lr6kz8t 9 ай бұрын
God bless, what a sweet way to go.
@user-ji1ql3nq2y
@user-ji1ql3nq2y 9 ай бұрын
I want to sleep
@tomsmith1847
@tomsmith1847 9 ай бұрын
My mother is 93 .I'm taking care of her in her own home.Shes a great mother and human being.She took great care of me and now I take care of her.Full circle.
@anndc8934
@anndc8934 9 ай бұрын
@heatherofthemountains
@heatherofthemountains 9 ай бұрын
May God bless you and your Mother. Thank you for being a good son to her. 💙
@brendatrimble9528
@brendatrimble9528 9 ай бұрын
I was a full-time caregiver for my mom for 7 years. She passed at home with me holding her hand. The last year or so was a long and difficult time, but I'd do it again in a heartbeat. She was the most caring, generous, giving person I've ever known. I miss her dearly. God bless you and your mother. Enjoy every day and have meaningful conversations with her as long as you're able to.
@TheCandiceWang
@TheCandiceWang 9 ай бұрын
Me, too. Amen
@holland9199
@holland9199 9 ай бұрын
My mom is 93 too 😮 my sister and nieces are taking of her now, she lives in Arizona too 😲
@KJ-xc6qs
@KJ-xc6qs 7 ай бұрын
My 89-year-old aunt lived a full, rich life. She survived a heart attack, a stroke, diabetes and was mentally sharp until the end. She decided to check out and entered hospice when a string of painful chronic conditions sapped the joy out of life...stopped taking her meds, said her goodbyes to loved ones, and peacefully drifted off in her sleep. She was a strong woman who took control of her life and her death.
@marciastewart1527
@marciastewart1527 5 ай бұрын
I’m 89 yrs old & don’t have much quality of life anymore. I wish I could just go peacefully to sleep, forever. Bless your Aunt.
@Cochita322
@Cochita322 5 ай бұрын
​@@marciastewart1527my favorite lady is 100, she'll be 101 in April, and she still has her mind, play cards, love music, she participates in every activity at the asisted living she is at, I worked there for 15 years, I recently retired and I am still in touch with her, 89 is still young she would say, blessings to you ❤️
@julietimado4381
@julietimado4381 5 ай бұрын
q
@olivehuss8270
@olivehuss8270 5 ай бұрын
I'm in my 80s and think we need to reassess aging with dignity options. When I can no longer prepare the food I like to eat, take walks, and continue to write, I'm out of here! Thank God for Fentanyl. A voluntary overdose should be easy to obtain. We're old, trust us to make wise decisions! Goodnight Moon...
@ohkay7418
@ohkay7418 5 ай бұрын
​@@olivehuss8270u r so right. We are soul mates about this
@sarahs3619
@sarahs3619 8 ай бұрын
My father is a doctor. That is the reason he knew to put my mother on hospice rather than have surgery on her broken hip. She was already very diminished by Alzheimer's and was not a good candidate for rehab. Sometimes, the best choice is to let nature take its course. Quality of life matters more than length of life.
@travelseatsyellowlab
@travelseatsyellowlab Ай бұрын
My grandmother died a few months ago at only 80 and I feel robbed of the additional three, five, eight potential years ahead of them. I'm sorry for your loss.
@sandiegan3788
@sandiegan3788 19 күн бұрын
Very reasonable plan. I can't agree more on your last statement. Why strive to stretch out life when quality of life has diminished?
@ericachitwood2465
@ericachitwood2465 16 күн бұрын
I disagree with your last statement in that it should be up to the individual assuming they have capacity to make that sort of decision. I'm not going to tell a family member no, you're not going to get a procedure just because I think that it won't go well. Now it's a different situation, if the person doesn't have the capacity to make the decision. This is why we have HC POAs. But no I'm never going to tell my family that they can't have a procedure done. Sorry its their choice.
@nneichan9353
@nneichan9353 9 ай бұрын
One of the biggest shocks to me as I aged poorly, was deciding if I could get another pet, wondering if he would outlive me, and how to assure his continued good care if I pass before him. It really brought home mortality to me.
@kippywylie
@kippywylie 9 ай бұрын
I love my little schnauzer at 74 years old and I honestly don't think I can go on if she dies. Then.... I'd be doing the same math as you "Hmmmm.... How many more years of independence with a new friend?" Or, maybe we should focus on rescuing aging older dogs who will pass with us?
@boycott2720
@boycott2720 9 ай бұрын
@@kippywylie I rescued a young dog because he was going to be euthanized. I figured that even if the very worst happened, he would have more years than if I had left him. There are also rescue organizations that will help find your dog a home if you predecease them. You can have an agreement with them that they will care for your dog when you can't. So don't give up on having another dog. You just have to do your research about how they will be cared for after you are gone.
@nneichan9353
@nneichan9353 9 ай бұрын
@@kippywylie I couldn't agree more. the older animals need loving homes.
@stellaz2595
@stellaz2595 9 ай бұрын
My latest dog is 6 yrs old (I'm 76). My daughter and SIL have promised to take my pets if I am gone or unable. I also have a 10 yr old cat.
@angelmission
@angelmission 9 ай бұрын
I have had dogs and cats all my life. I cannot imagine a life without a fur baby beside me. This I fear the most about aging.
@civiltheoryCEO
@civiltheoryCEO 9 ай бұрын
This is spot on. I'm a caregiver for my 86 year old mother with Alzheimer's. It just seems cruel to outlive your brain.
@mikenixon2401
@mikenixon2401 9 ай бұрын
Thank you for saying this from caregiver's perspective. See my comment.
@gissellest333
@gissellest333 9 ай бұрын
Absolutely agree, my aunt was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s at 82 and in just one year I saw her deteriorate rapidly. It was horrible seeing her suffer, she died three weeks ago. I miss her so much but Ik the suffering was too much. 😢
@swiftkarma4436
@swiftkarma4436 9 ай бұрын
​@mustafamuse643 that may be true for those that believe that. The issue is your mind failing you before your go.
@civiltheoryCEO
@civiltheoryCEO 9 ай бұрын
@@gissellest333 sorry for your loss.
@truther001
@truther001 9 ай бұрын
@@mustafamuse643 Yes, but you must also know that many will go to the devil.
@DaisyAnnabelle6
@DaisyAnnabelle6 8 ай бұрын
My Mom was in hospice care for a few short days as she was at the end of her life from metastatic cancer. As a nurse I watched the nurses who were more compassionate and kind than I could’ve ever known tenderly caring for her. My mother passed away from a horrible disease. May she rest in peace, I loved her so much! 🙏✝️❤️
@ChristianRoerbeck
@ChristianRoerbeck 6 ай бұрын
Hello there,I’m Christian roerbeck Tammy from Copenhagen…I came across your page here through the utube suggestion for me,how are you?
@le_th_
@le_th_ 6 ай бұрын
May every nurse and caregiver who has had the kindness of heart to offer tender care to a total stranger, even when no one was looking, find even more kindness for their caregivers in their time of need. We appreciate you and your care more than most of us can ever articulate during those sickest or weakest moments when you care for us.
@potterylady44
@potterylady44 6 ай бұрын
Mine too this year. Miss her so much😔
@patricechavez4992
@patricechavez4992 6 ай бұрын
I CARE FOR MY MOM 93 AND MAKE THE BEST OF US. SENIOR TAKING CARE OF ANOTHER SENIOR😅. 🎉
@ChristianRoerbeck
@ChristianRoerbeck 6 ай бұрын
@@potterylady44 hello there good morning and a beautiful Sunday to you
@robertbender73
@robertbender73 8 ай бұрын
A haunting reality for a single person with no family. Excellent docu
@sheilapearson4042
@sheilapearson4042 29 күн бұрын
Some of them could have 5 children, but if your children are crappy adults or may have died before the parents the end will be the same whether single, or widow, or have crappy children.
@adstix
@adstix 9 ай бұрын
To every "young" person watching this video, please appreciate every moment of your life ... appreciate your vision, hearing, sense of taste and touch. Appreciate the ability to use your limbs effectively. Avoid excessive indulgences in your youth that can impact the quality of life in the twilight years! @Frontline PBS, thanks for calling our attention to our collective plight!
@RT-qd8yl
@RT-qd8yl 9 ай бұрын
Nothing has been done though. This aired in 2006, and the situation now has only become worse.
@adstix
@adstix 9 ай бұрын
@@RT-qd8yl it's still a wake-up call to those who haven't reached that vulnerable stage yet. To recognize the stark reality ahead!
@HickYankee
@HickYankee 9 ай бұрын
Agreed! And I always tell people to resolve old arguments with your parents (and others) and spend all the best time you can with them. Cherish them. Though of course some parents and children are not great people. Overall we often lose our parents far too soon and have regrets and rue the lost time and memories we could have had. Many arguments that seemed important seem petty and worthless after it's too late.
@anncata7368
@anncata7368 9 ай бұрын
Agreed.
@bayoubabe6698
@bayoubabe6698 9 ай бұрын
I always tell young people ‘Don’t take advantage of your youth’
@lindseyhylton-marroquin819
@lindseyhylton-marroquin819 9 ай бұрын
My grandmother was a hospice nurse and my dad a nurse turned funeral director. They both have said, “When it comes to end of life..there are worse things than death.”
@nacarreira777
@nacarreira777 8 ай бұрын
So true. I don't want to be a burden to my children so I will take myself off the board if I become infirm.
@peterrabbit2719
@peterrabbit2719 7 ай бұрын
This triggered so many emotional memories. I was very fortunate to care full time for my 103 year old father at my childhood home. He had all his mental and physical ability so it was not a mental and physical drain for me. The last three months he knew it was time but it was hard for me to accept. My parents loved me so much I always knew I would be the sibling to be his full time caretaker. I seen my selfish friends put their parents in nursing homes and walk away. This was something I adamantly refused to do. The one of the most beautiful thing in life for me was the metamorphosis of son becoming the parent and father the son and seeing his soul passing to heaven to be with my mother.
@mariemedinavd
@mariemedinavd 6 ай бұрын
What was his food choices
@AlphaAl1
@AlphaAl1 3 ай бұрын
How beautiful God bless you
@sct4040
@sct4040 7 ай бұрын
I blink and I am 64, time goes very quickly. Enjoy your youth, travel, see the world.
@laprechaun12
@laprechaun12 4 ай бұрын
I'm gonna have to stop you there. What is youth if you're always plagued by acne? Depression? And to top it off, what is youth if you live in a world plagued by technology which in turn is worse when it comes to socialization? I try to be optimistic but all this shit eventually gets to you.
@harlinaindra4899
@harlinaindra4899 3 ай бұрын
​@@laprechaun12maybe you would understand more if you volunteer helping an elderly relative or neighbour twice a month. It may help you with your depression.
@Operator_68
@Operator_68 Ай бұрын
​@@laprechaun12there are numerous cures for acne now so that's a pretty simple fix. The depression is caused by what you said, a world addicted to technology, with little to no human interaction anymore. Put the phone down and get out in nature. Fish, canoe, hike, and you'll find real happiness. And in doing those things you'll meet people who aren't glued to their phones.
@cjhoward409
@cjhoward409 Ай бұрын
@@laprechaun12 Put your phone down. Go outside, go visit an elderly neighbor and volunteer to help them mow their lawn, clean their house. Just get away from the technology. As far as acne goes, quit sugar and fried foods, and possibly even all dairy. My son at 16 quit dairy and his bad acne went away.
@jamesr.vanpattenjr.8963
@jamesr.vanpattenjr.8963 Ай бұрын
I'm here at 63
@Kenjiro5775
@Kenjiro5775 9 ай бұрын
As a 55 year old, what you are telling me is that it is better to die at 64 like my father than to live long enough to falll victim to corporate medical injustice.
@Kyle-gb9dq
@Kyle-gb9dq 9 ай бұрын
Yep. My dad died from a massive heart attack at age 60. Thankfully, he didn't have to go thru any of this
@philipharned2794
@philipharned2794 9 ай бұрын
Age 62 is the age that most people go into the Emergency Room with a Heart Attack or Stroke. Many go in the front door by an ambulance and out the back door in a hearse. Be happy if that's not you. Today, many people never see the age of 55. Others are expecting to live to 120.
@frankclements1431
@frankclements1431 9 ай бұрын
I'm leaning more towards sooner than later.
@jeffreybaier5312
@jeffreybaier5312 9 ай бұрын
@philipharned2794 My doctor told me watch the prostate and chloresterol. Otherwise, I'm in excellent health at 69. He was surprised and I'm wondering why. You are correct, most die young.
@cantstanditanymore
@cantstanditanymore 9 ай бұрын
Best comment thus far👍
@Jack-yw7bq
@Jack-yw7bq 9 ай бұрын
My great aunt turned 92 in January and the crazy part is, she doesn’t look 92, she’s not senile, she’s attentive, lucid, walks with ease, doesn’t need or use a cane, wheelchair, or a walker, and has a decent memory, the only health problems she’s experiencing are problems with her digestive system. She’s outlived her husband (my great uncle) who passed away in Dec 2019 at 91 bc of old age and she is a living example that you can still be active into your 80s and 90s. God bless her!
@bigbay1159
@bigbay1159 9 ай бұрын
It's potential, 90 looks different for alot of people and for some the 80s is descent but I've seen rapid decline once at 90
@Adrianafaith123
@Adrianafaith123 9 ай бұрын
Bless her
@AlexisLynn10
@AlexisLynn10 9 ай бұрын
I love that! She is truly blessed.
@itzyzaza1806
@itzyzaza1806 9 ай бұрын
Indeed💖💖💖💖
@virginialangford6257
@virginialangford6257 9 ай бұрын
My 93 year old mother is active, works part time, looks much younger, does aerobics and kick boxing. Lives alone with no assistance..old age is not the same for all people.
@luvyatubers
@luvyatubers 8 ай бұрын
I've met elders in retirement homes that want to live no matter what. Met some who are ready to go but say for some reason they keep waking up in the morning. Even met one who planned to go out by medical because was tired of dealing with cancer. I believe all of their choices should be respected
@maryrutten3387
@maryrutten3387 6 ай бұрын
I am 75 and I am taking care my 38 yo son with Down Syndrome and autism. He lives at home with me and his dad who is 73. We are not alone in this. There are many of us out here doing this. We are all very worried and scared of what will happen to are sons or daughters after we are gone or can’t do the care taking any longer. I have numerous health problems as does my son. His care takes priority and caring for him. This is exhausting for us. There is little that is being done to address this issue. Will my daughter have her brother and her parents to look after plus her family? How can she possibly do that? My son has been in 3 different “group” homes. I can’t tell you how bad the care was. It was horrible. There are regulations by the state but they are under staffed and over worked. These homes can hire anyone off the street basically and train them for every thing including distributing meds. They don’t need any schooling or certificate to do this work. Recently they have been hiring mostly male African immigrants who barely speak English. They don’t know how to cook or clean and when I would try to talk to them they did not know what I was talking about. I did address my concerns with administration but it went nowhere. Basically hiring is tight and these are most of the applicants the get. If they do not hire them they will be short staffed and have to close. That results in what happens to the residents living there and lost revenue for the owners. In this past house my son was abused 3 x. My son, in three years, gained almost 40 pounds, he is now short of breath all the time, has a cpap he refuses to wear and severe obstructive sleep apnea and is dealing with cervical dystonia. We are working on all these health issues plus our own health issues that seem to take a back seat to his. Between him and myself one of us is going to the doctor every week. This is a huge issue for many of us out here and it goes totally unrecognized. Also as our sons and daughters get older, services become fewer and fewer. It is hard to find physicians, specialists or providers who have knowledge or skill to work with special needs. Their health issues are many times unique to their disability. Finding help is harder and harder if not impossible. So as my husband and I are going through our 70’s, headed to our 80’s, we are caring for our son who is 38 who is unable to care for himself. I take care of him like I would a young child and when he has a bowel movement, I must still wipe his butt and I also have to shower him. All this care does not address all the paperwork we are required to fill out for the courts. We must do a yearly report for the court’s and account for every penny of the money he receives from the government. Coming in and going out had better balance too and all receipts must be saved. Organizations, businesses and the general population have absolutely no idea this goes on unless you have a family member dealing with this. No one is really dealing with these issues and the elderly that are taking care there sons and daughters with significant needs. There are waiting lines to get into a group homes, all are full and turn over doesn’t happen quickly. Add to this the poor regulations for training and hiring staff. One reason for this hiring issue is what they pay them. It is squat for what is expected of them. You get what you are willing to pay for. Also about 10 years ago my parents were aging, sick and then passed away. Along with taking care of my son and working I helps take care of them. My mom passed first at the age of 86 and about 4 years later my dad at 93 got cancer. He was very ill because it went undiagnosed for so long. He never realized he was so ill until it was all through his body. When he got sick he came and stayed in our home. Seems like everyday we were going to the doctor. I even gave up my bed for him until we could get a hospital bed. That came in the day he passed. He was here for about 4 months before he passed, in my bed and surrounded by all his kids but one. As a 75 yo woman I have no idea what it feels like to be taken care of or nurtured. Since my son was born 38 years ago, my life changed forever. My commitment went to my son who would forever be a child and my other children. Those children have grown and have life’s and families of their own as it should be but not true for my other son. Don’t get me wrong, I love my son more than I could ever explain to anyone. He has taught me a lot too about life and people and given me new perspective even with regard to my faith. I cannot tell you all how lonely of a life this is. Unless you have actually walked in our shoes you will never know. That is fact! They closed institutions and hospitals, which is exactly the right thing to do. Children with special needs and disabilities now live with their parents and other sibs. The family dynamic in that household will be very far from what the “norm” is. It is what it is, the child cannot be “fixed”, and will be dependent on the parents until the time the parents pass or the child passes. So what they didn’t do after closing those institutions and hospitals was plan for what would happen now to these children and the people responsible for caring for them. The system is totally underfunded. However the quality of these children is 150% better as they are loved and living with their family and being treated as a human being. Imagine what the government saves in $$$ by closing these institutions and hospitals. It had to be very expensive to run plus the quality of life for the people was so bad, there was no quality. In the institution that closed in our area there are unmarked graves and no one knows who is buried there. So sad that this is what was done to a segment of our society. Overall it is a shame how the most weak and vulnerable in our society are treated and cared for. We could be doing so much better than we are but we don’t.
@carolgarrett1786
@carolgarrett1786 3 ай бұрын
Yours was a very long text but I read every word to the end. My heart goes out to you! My goodness, how overwhelming. Thank you for bravely sharing what your lives are like.🙏
@bluewaters3100
@bluewaters3100 3 ай бұрын
I have a 74 year old friend whose son was born 35 years ago with Downs and I watched her go through him having a bag that had to be changed several times a day. The things she went through to get him good care was incredible. At age 8 he was able to get surgery and the bag was removed which gave her alot more freedom. She had two older kids too. She moved across country to be around family which was good for her. Lucky for her she has no health issues at the time but is single. Her son is stable with a mental state of about a 7 year old. He is happy and I hope both of them stay healthy. I can't imagine the stress you have endured. And you are right ..these mentally challenged children are very loving people. They deserved to be treated as valuable human beings because they are...Wishing you all the best.
@debharshaw1882
@debharshaw1882 2 ай бұрын
I am a female 70 years old with a special need son 43 with metal problems some other things. I care for him at home, he is able to walk and get and out of tub. Does feed himself. Which is a blessing, but still is hard some day's.
@whitneyc.3257
@whitneyc.3257 Ай бұрын
Impressive. Thank you for sharing this and raised awareness about how aging looks like for people living with or taking care of people with special needs
@susanlasiter9074
@susanlasiter9074 Ай бұрын
Thank you for telling us about your experience. My grandson is autistic. Not a day passes that I don't think about his future and his parents. Prayers to you and all who support you 🙏.
@Aria-cd6dq
@Aria-cd6dq 9 ай бұрын
The fact that we get free documentaries on KZbin by FRONTLINE PBS is truly a gift. 👏👏👏 May I also remind you the fact that Mormons treat and held the same prejudices toward Native Americans shared by other European Americans.. For instance, our Native American population in our motherland, the Continent of America before the European Colonizers arrived, was around 15 millions, while the European population in their motherland, the Continent of Europe was around 25 millions. Today, Native American population is 15 million, while the European population, in the Continents of America + Europe, is a staggering TWO BILLION! A shocking sad truth. 😔 In my humble opinion, it's about time to decolonize the Colonized lands, and return it to rightful owners Native American people. Notorious global cardinal crimes the Christian West has committed, and benefited a great deals, such as Slavery & Colonialism had long been over, why on earth is notorious Colonization still lingering on, may I ask? 😔🤷🤷
@jdenino6022
@jdenino6022 9 ай бұрын
This is an old documentary from 2006.
@wonderwhyiwonder3458
@wonderwhyiwonder3458 9 ай бұрын
@@jdenino6022 End of life has stayed pretty much the same. If they made it today there might be more of a discussion of euthanasia as an option, but on the whole it holds up wonderfully.
@stevenlevernier7357
@stevenlevernier7357 9 ай бұрын
Free? Wow, you caught a strong case of the stupid.
@HobbyOrganist
@HobbyOrganist 9 ай бұрын
@@aprilmay1700 Sure, but I object to these outfits continuing to be making money on works by long dead music composers, artists, writers, and movies that are from the 1940s and 1950s that long ago paid for themselves and made a huge profit
@drugsdelaney2907
@drugsdelaney2907 9 ай бұрын
@@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist4 OK GROOMER
@codemans123
@codemans123 9 ай бұрын
I run a nursing home and all of my residents range in age from 92-101 years. My medical director is a minimalist in medication intervention and only prescribes the most necessary of drugs. He’s extremely involved in their needs and care and doesn’t just come in and prescribe to treat a minor issue. We all work as a team and treat everyone like they are family and they truly become family. We interact and spend 1 on 1 time. I truly believe that frequent interaction, encourage regular exercise, spending time actually talking with them and staying engaged with their needs and interests, keeping family involved with care along with the physician. I take great pride in being able to say my residents are an entire group of centurions. The physician jokingly states he doesn’t know what we are doing and it’s impressive that the entire group is 90+. I just tell him we care.
@conniedean3787
@conniedean3787 9 ай бұрын
Many nursing homes have people in their 60's , 70's and 80s, some are even in their early 30s , 40s and 50s, they can go on outings, and enjoy the outdoors, the food is pretty good, and watch old movies., they have free maid service. I visited one for 20 years almost every day, had a family member there. the activities were pretty good, entertainment and bingo.
@stevenlevernier7357
@stevenlevernier7357 9 ай бұрын
If I ever make it to an age where I get put in your home, could you just put one in my head? Save everyone the time and money and most importantly I don't want it...
@davidorlin3499
@davidorlin3499 9 ай бұрын
My comment is for the nursing home. Continue to do the excellent job you are doing. May God bless you and your staff.
@ILikeMyYT123
@ILikeMyYT123 9 ай бұрын
I'm curious where your nursing home is at and how much you charge for your care.
@conniedean3787
@conniedean3787 9 ай бұрын
@@ILikeMyYT123 my daughter spent 20 years in a nursing home, in New York, she was 18 when she had a cardiac arrest, she came home said she could not breathe, I gave her a nebulizer treatment, she had alcohol and drugs in her system, I did not know, she could not talk walk blind feeding tube wheelchair for 20 years, I visited her almost every day, took her home for visits, mall , movies , helped with her care, she died at the age of 38 in 2017, she was on Medicaid 100 per cent covered 😥
@fayprivate7975
@fayprivate7975 7 ай бұрын
I’m 80 yrs old now. I am dealing with chronic conditions and I figured out that we weren’t meant to live this long with such reduced functionality. Fortunately, I still have mobility with a cane, I can drive as well as I ever did, my mind is just as alert as it ever was. For 23 years, I’ve had a much younger husband who helps me everyday. I’m lucky, but I don’t like that I have limitations. I now want to get all my things in order because I don’t know how much time I have left. Yet, I still have dreams and plans and I wonder if I will be able to realize them. Life is weird now.
@ps_nyisgone
@ps_nyisgone 7 ай бұрын
if you have your mind and can walk even with a cane you're good!
@ShaneM420
@ShaneM420 4 ай бұрын
God bless you
@phyllisain
@phyllisain 3 ай бұрын
I hate the limitations. I am too young to feel so fragile, since I have these broken parts and cannot drive until they heal. Only 76.
@travelseatsyellowlab
@travelseatsyellowlab Ай бұрын
My grandmother was stolen from us at only 80, and it is hard for me to go on without her.
@cooler8625
@cooler8625 7 ай бұрын
I have always LOVED the elderly. They have so much to teach us if we would only take the time to listen to them.
@johnsmith2221
@johnsmith2221 3 ай бұрын
And many people in this country have no respect for them.
@TallyRocky
@TallyRocky 9 ай бұрын
Too bad this is almost 17 years old…out of date. An updated version would be nice. This crisis is already here and we’re in the middle of it. US healthcare sucks.
@ey67
@ey67 9 ай бұрын
Here is your update. They are in the streets dying and cars and RVs. Predatory capitalism has evicted many from their homes and apts
@PerspectiveEngineer
@PerspectiveEngineer 9 ай бұрын
Yes 17 years worse but that was an excellent comment
@bridgetcollins7969
@bridgetcollins7969 9 ай бұрын
They could have Kass on. He's 84 now -- let's see if he's still in favor of not giving seniors the support they need.
@jhf99991
@jhf99991 9 ай бұрын
Its good at one thing keeping people "alive" 💰💰💰
@fortnitegodfortaport5389
@fortnitegodfortaport5389 9 ай бұрын
US sick care, I wish we had a genuine healthcare system
@terrycellamare6737
@terrycellamare6737 9 ай бұрын
I was a nurse for over 40 yrs where the majority of our patients were geriatric …..the horrible situations I witnessed because relatives were not ready for them to go was depressing……their long chronic illnesses had put them in a very sad state yet the relatives wanted more done …easy to say when ur not the one suffering day after day …..the greatest love is to let them go when God is calling
@mojojeinxs9960
@mojojeinxs9960 7 ай бұрын
Nurses aid in assistant living Oldest person I take care of is receiving physical therapy to get her strength back to be able to walk again she is 107 absolutely ridiculous family took her off hospice. Death has no mercy on elderly with good insurance.
@pamverdin9295
@pamverdin9295 7 ай бұрын
I too was a nurse 40 years saw similar situations
@martycallmer9865
@martycallmer9865 7 ай бұрын
just make sure your children or caregivers or surrogates know you do not want to live on with extreme procedures
@martycallmer9865
@martycallmer9865 7 ай бұрын
​@@mojojeinxs9960agreed
@os2958
@os2958 6 ай бұрын
I think it needs to be up to the elderly person if they want to live. My mom wanted to live everyday of her life even in the circumstances you mentioned.
@ToriHalfon
@ToriHalfon 7 ай бұрын
We think it’s a kindness to put our pets that we love wholeheartedly to sleep. It’s an absolute crime that assisted suicide is illegal.
@Sheshe661972
@Sheshe661972 6 ай бұрын
Wow! This video first aired in 2006 (17 yrs ago). The information is very much in tune with what my sister, brother, & I are dealing with in caring for our elderly mother now. In 2006 she was still well & totally independent. In 2013, she had a stroke and all of our lives changed drastically, to say the least. I'll spare the details, but my younger sister (who isn't paid via Medicaid as a caregiver because my mom draws too much from Social Security in the state of Georgia) gave up her job to be mom's caregiver. All three of us have to pitch in to make it work. It is stressful, people, but we love mama.
@marybethsmith6458
@marybethsmith6458 4 ай бұрын
Georgia stinks when it comes to benefits. I cared for my Mother til she became wheelchair bound and I couldn't anymore but I see her regularly at the nursing home which is five miles from me.
@bluewaters3100
@bluewaters3100 3 ай бұрын
My sister has a 54 year old friend who took care of his mom who died 6 months ago. He took care of her for 7 years in a two bedroom apt. that her social security check paid for. He did not get paid by medicaid. He got a job after she died but then got laid off and was unable to find another. He got evicted and had to put things in storage. The guy has one pair of pants, one shirt, one pair of sweatpants and sweatshirt. He has been staying with my sister and I now for 3 months while he gets on his feet again. He basically had put his life on hold for seven years. He has no family and no children. I am concerned for him because he takes terrible care of himself and eats nothing but processed foods. The food in our U.S. grocery stores is terrible for you unless it is organic. We need to educate parents and kids on the danger of eating and drinking things with all these horrible chemicals in them. Maybe then we might see people live healthier and happier lives.
@Blonde111
@Blonde111 9 ай бұрын
Just lost my mom at 99. This was exactly her story… she lingered with all her chronic diseases. It was heartbreaking.
@JC-du6sn
@JC-du6sn 9 ай бұрын
Look up the autobiography Within Heaven's Gates by Rebecca Springer 😇
@directAction3389
@directAction3389 9 ай бұрын
Same. My Grandma made it to 105. She was was slowly dying and miserable for 15 years. I was pretty much the only one that looked in on her. So I got to see the whole descent. Grandma just stopped being Grandma after a while. It was kind of a relief when she finally passed away.
@jdenino6022
@jdenino6022 9 ай бұрын
@@directAction3389my mother wants to die she has so many medical issues.
@breadfan9
@breadfan9 9 ай бұрын
I mean. SHE WAS 99.........
@kiyoponnn
@kiyoponnn 9 ай бұрын
Living to 100 is good only if you age well otherwise it's just a slow, painful wait.
@viralnorn9173
@viralnorn9173 9 ай бұрын
My dog got old and she was full of tumors. She was dying. We took her to the vet and had her euthanized. It was the kindest most peaceful death I have witnessed. We should all have this choice. Legally!
@missmodern
@missmodern 9 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry about your pooch. My parrot died from tumors. She was my best friend.
@evelynwaugh4053
@evelynwaugh4053 9 ай бұрын
Agree! We wouldn't let our beloved pets suffer. We should have the same option for ourselves. Some states do allow euthanasia with prescribed medication, but it's not widely known. A handful of western states do, plus Vermont, but not all doctors participate, and you must be legally competent.
@xScooterAZx
@xScooterAZx 9 ай бұрын
I agree.
@bettina868
@bettina868 9 ай бұрын
I agree! In my state we theoretically have this legal right, but because a religious organization runs most of the health care businesses here, it is extremely difficult to access this legal right.
@swiftkarma4436
@swiftkarma4436 9 ай бұрын
​@@bettina868I think that it horrible. People's religious views can be well intended but lack compassion at the same time.
@HelmetOfHonor
@HelmetOfHonor 2 ай бұрын
This was originally aired in 2006. Now, all the elderly filmed in here are long gone RIP 😢😢
@shanqincui5430
@shanqincui5430 4 ай бұрын
I once knew a woman who was 93 years old and was very frail. One day she suddenly had difficulty breathing, so her children called an ambulance. But she had seen a lot, and she believed that this was a sign of death and that first aid should not be given. But she was forced to the emergency room by her children. The difficulty breathing was cured after first aid, but from that time on, she was unable to take care of herself. She spent more than 10 years in bed, crying every day. She believed that when a person reaches the last stage of life, when God calls you, you should go immediately, otherwise because your organs have failed, you will live a painful life that is worse than death.
@inspiration6099
@inspiration6099 8 ай бұрын
Caring elderly parents is much harder than caring babies. Especially with dementia patients who lose their mind
@jodyel
@jodyel 4 ай бұрын
My 85-year old mother has dementia and it's scary. I really feel for her as she did not deserve this.
@teresasmith4145
@teresasmith4145 3 ай бұрын
😢❤🥀
@Jacqueline-vr5re
@Jacqueline-vr5re 3 ай бұрын
Life is not meant to be easy 😮
@jodyel
@jodyel 3 ай бұрын
@@Jacqueline-vr5re Indeed, and it's not. Which is why we have compassion on those suffering.
@cyrusdubash3097
@cyrusdubash3097 3 ай бұрын
Oh, much harder than a baby. Just with their weight alone.
@justmyopinion9883
@justmyopinion9883 9 ай бұрын
The doctors and nurses who care for elderly people have my utmost admiration and respect. Thank you, Frontline, for sharing this touching video.
@paulanix7561
@paulanix7561 9 ай бұрын
Dont be fooled, they want you to say okay to euthanasia.
@Jopey_Meow
@Jopey_Meow 9 ай бұрын
Caregivers too
@zakatista5246
@zakatista5246 9 ай бұрын
The caregivers do ALL the work. If you find a home health aid or nursing aid you like, treat them like gold.
@justmyopinion9883
@justmyopinion9883 9 ай бұрын
@@Jopey_Meow Yes, caregivers too. I count caregivers as nurses. Even if they are family members who take care of a person, they are performing a nurse’s job.
@hersheyssmith2104
@hersheyssmith2104 9 ай бұрын
Beware! Not all caregivers even nurses would handle your old folks with care. Once you delivered them in nursing home, you don’t know what they are going thru in the hands of those so called caregivers! So many unreported cases of abuse in nursing homes.@@zakatista5246
@curiouscat3384
@curiouscat3384 8 ай бұрын
I did not see this film when it first aired. I was just moving in that year with my mother who was becoming frail and losing memory. Previously my career was in nursing home administration and I swore no one in my family would live in an institution unless they were advanced alzheimers or had a condition that required 24 hr care. I must say that this is an incredibly thoughtful and comprehensive presentation of the challenges and choices we all have to make about healthcare and aging. I so appreciate the thoughtfulness and wisdom and angel-like caring that these 3 doctors exhibit. I hope many people will see this, discuss it with your families, have your living wills and advance directives drawn up. My siblings and I (in our 60's) support Death With Dignity legislation in our states, and one of us is training to be a death doula! I am single no children and absolutely plan to avoid spending my last 5-20 yrs in physical and mental decline. If I can't be active and independent I will not become a zombie in a hospital bed. Interesting and delighted to see that Mrs. Strongin died as she hoped, in 2006 the same year this film was made!
@debbietrabeau3764
@debbietrabeau3764 7 ай бұрын
Should pass a bill to make it legal for assisted dying if that’s what a person wants.
@debbiedorr3986
@debbiedorr3986 7 күн бұрын
I agree.
@user-cc6zh7st3z
@user-cc6zh7st3z 9 ай бұрын
Having kids doesn't guarantee anything.....
@kimlarso
@kimlarso 9 ай бұрын
Kaboom😢
@richradtylr4
@richradtylr4 9 ай бұрын
​@@kimlarsoNothing is guarantee in life but death.
@MrBrewman95
@MrBrewman95 9 ай бұрын
@@richradtylr4don't forget taxes. 😂
@glendacastillo6504
@glendacastillo6504 8 ай бұрын
The young generation is not mentally prepared for the aging parents. They are too busy playing online 🎮
@susanmorgan4151
@susanmorgan4151 Ай бұрын
Ain't that the truth!❤
@patriapardue2925
@patriapardue2925 9 ай бұрын
As a healthcare provider, I will say that I believe that we are keeping people alive for too long. Longevity is not everything, if you are lonely, sick, miserable and in pain. Decreased hearing, vision, mobility and cognitive ability: these are all awful, but combined, they are truly unbearable. I know that most people want to live as long as possible, or so they think, but I cared for a 92-year-old who was in despair that she had lived so long. All family and friends gone, unable to find any joy. It is sad.
@howellwong11
@howellwong11 8 ай бұрын
I'm 91 years old and got all my marbles. I live alone in my home and can take care of all my needs. I can still drive and my son drops by every now and then to see if I'm still alive. My 76 year old wife is still alive and lives in her own country. I am an introvert and she is an extrovert.
@LauraFran55
@LauraFran55 8 ай бұрын
wow you surprised with your comment, you are at home while your wife lives in another country? kudos to you, you are a brave and strong man , I am assuming you are some sort of artist because of being introvert, have a nice day @@howellwong11
@SyonisMacias
@SyonisMacias 7 ай бұрын
​@@howellwong11and?
@mojojeinxs9960
@mojojeinxs9960 7 ай бұрын
Nurses aid in assistant living. Witness too many forced into physical therapy at 90 plus why? . 107 yr old currently is doing physical therapy her family wants her to walk more don't want her in a wheelchair. The poor women!! Elderly are cash cows for medical facilities long-term care facilities pharmaceutical and medical equipment companies. Keeping people alive into their late 90's and over is very profitable. The more frail the better just keep them breathing.
@howellwong11
@howellwong11 7 ай бұрын
@@SyonisMacias ,.....,and consider myself a lucky sob. You are just envious and afraid.
@mapsandglobespro
@mapsandglobespro 5 ай бұрын
Both of my parents died in their fifties. They had eight children. 5 of us are now in our sixties but the youngest had died of "natural causes" in his late forties. Lifestyle, diet, exercise, attitude, good friends, and a whole lot of luck is the best way to live one's life!
@southerncross179
@southerncross179 8 ай бұрын
Eleven months ago, made the decision to place my 97 yo father in a nursing home. Dimentia, taking him to die after he stopped eating, the feeding tube and prolonging his life because taking him home to would be starving him to death, i have gone through this. Im xhedding tears as I'm writing this.
@lisajoyaslanis
@lisajoyaslanis 6 ай бұрын
Am so sorry...Aussie?? Lisa.
@charlesterrizzi8311
@charlesterrizzi8311 5 ай бұрын
I’m not sure I would personally want a feeding tube installed in this situation. In fact I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t
@edwardgabriel5281
@edwardgabriel5281 8 ай бұрын
I'm 95 and mowed an acre of difficult lawn a couple of days ago. I force myself to walk with my walker. The thing is that I feel this time to be a wonderful part of my life. I travel far and wide every day, via my computer and the internet. I can look into any subject I want and learn new stuff. I am socially active on email, Facebook, etc. The thing that I believe helped me is when I joined a certain church, in 1953, and stopped smoking, drinking alcohol, I even stopped drinking coffee. I can remember things I experienced all the way back since I was two years old. Honest. I have loved the life I have experienced. I can't begin to remember the names of all my great grandchildren. I also have three great great grandchildren. Having said the above, it has not all been peaches and cream. But whose life has. I look forward to going through the veil of life to be with my departed loved ones, which I know will happen.
@viviendoalpresupuesto6926
@viviendoalpresupuesto6926 8 ай бұрын
You are very beautiful person from inside and out, I've been a care giver for 27 years I read you as a loving person and fun to hangout, I'm almost 57 years old working as a care giver in a nursing home and little sweet ladies like you make me want to continue doing what I do for a living. I love where my heavenly father has place me. May the Lord continue blessing you with strength and courage. Thanks for your inspirational.sincerely Martha💜
@Kaledrone
@Kaledrone 8 ай бұрын
​​@@viviendoalpresupuesto6926Can you literally not tell by the name that it isn't a lady?
@licyortiz22
@licyortiz22 8 ай бұрын
⁠@@Kaledrone😅
@uwsgrrrl9981
@uwsgrrrl9981 8 ай бұрын
God bless you. Im 72 yo & wouldn’t want to mow the lawn. I do cycle 3 to 4 times a week 10 mi. I stopped drinking & smoking when I was 39 yo.
@alb12345672
@alb12345672 7 ай бұрын
@@uwsgrrrl9981 Not drinking and smoking is huge. I never drank or smoked. I am 52, a health nut. I speed skate a 20 mile round trip nature path every other day. I feel great after it. I also do moderate strength training. Good lifestyle, diet, etc. can greatly improve your fate later in life. Nothing is 100%, but there are women in their 80s on YT lifting weights.
@VeronicaMowery
@VeronicaMowery 8 ай бұрын
Both of my parents died in their 70's. I hope to go during that time in my life as well. No nursing home, or extreme care. There are worse things than death.
@indiaandrews6996
@indiaandrews6996 6 ай бұрын
Me too.
@papawnanasaveslovesnlife9530
@papawnanasaveslovesnlife9530 6 ай бұрын
**Yes, some of us ,Our body is so very worn out long b4 it's time tho n we non-Stop Go,go,go all our lives even as kids were caring for or helping do, build, Put something heavy like Car n Trucks back together n it's🚫 fair to us also 🙄💭❗... It's challenges daily for even basic care n needs (Shower store n cook, or Shower, dr., n Dinner, or see grandchildren, do something fun n memories , even baking cookies or going to a festival or school play n awards ceremony with them in elementary school 🏫 ) is the dilemma 💔 n a 6 yr old tells me " I 🚫 care what you 👀💭 look like NaNa, jus come" 😢 really is 💔❗., yes a Prisoner in our own body👀💭😢❗... Being trapped , n the ailments n pain, 😮over n over takes a toll on your mind too❗... My kids 🚫 understand, Cause even I 🚫 Myself 🙄💭❗... I n my kids took care of my mom 11 yrs. N daddy for 3 yrs. They passed 8 months apart, my kids were all latter teens, 18, 16,15, n 13 😢❗... They never ever 🚫 Had a overnight vacation cause I had mom n dad n I promised em I'd be happy to 😊take care of em, n I/We ❤'d it most days but it was horrible in latter time sadly mom was 66 n bed to chair 10 yrs. Dad was 76 n had mini strokes n diabetes, till when he had major stroke, he 🤕🚫Understand n forget he couldnt walk, Get up at nite to try n go bathroom instead of telling me n fell n broke his hip 😮😢❗.. I'll🚫 forgive myself for it, n having to be the 1 to do as mom asked n pull the plug 😢😠❗... It echoes some days but mom did have a DNR in place but for 3 days she suffered tremendously but dad 🚫 complained n jus went to sleep beside me n 🚫 wake up for 2 days 😢😇❗... I know its scary sometimes myself n Im very limited to 2 things in a day or I'm down for 3 days in bed, Im only 51🙄⌛❗.. Tests are bein done but The outcome 🚫 change the body I've grown to know but 🚫 ever get use to 😢😠😮 My husband has different types of diagnosis n I have taken care of em 3 yrs. already ❤, Mental health becomes evident 😮😢 on the daily now n has for sometime ✨🕯✨, So sorry I jus did a mental dump 😮 on ya, your comment jus hit home ❤ with me so thank you to anyone who reads this n have a blessed day, evening , where ever ya are 👋😇**
@wontbefooledagain9400
@wontbefooledagain9400 6 ай бұрын
I hear so many people say, oh 70 or 75 is so young still, I’m like no it’s not 80 we’re pretty much done, there’s some people who are blessed with god health through their 80s but most are not. I’m ready to go when it’s my time, I damn sure don’t want nursing home or to be a burden ♥️
@grumpyoldlady_rants
@grumpyoldlady_rants 6 ай бұрын
Both my parents also died in their early 70s. Sadly, my dad developed vascular dementia so his last few years were awful. I want to live until my early 80s. I hope I make it.
@rcas350pilot8
@rcas350pilot8 5 ай бұрын
@@wontbefooledagain9400 speak for yourself, I'm 73 and my biggest health issue is getting my pullup count higher. I can move a mound of snow as big as a pickup truck in an hour by myself. Not everyone ages the same and some of us have taken good care of ourselves most of our lives.
@GeorgeBonez
@GeorgeBonez 8 ай бұрын
I’m 54 and unfortunately I’m not going to get much older due to various health issues. I don’t think I’m afraid of death or not existing anymore but I’m terrified of the process of dying. My father suffered an unimaginable painful death and I was his caregiver till the end. There just seems like there should be a way to let people pass more peacefully
@bobtaylor170
@bobtaylor170 7 ай бұрын
Read The Gospel of John, chapter 11.
@wendy54321
@wendy54321 6 ай бұрын
The Gospel that we believe in order to be saved. Jesus the Son of God, died or you/our sins. He was buried. On the the third day he arose from the dead/grave for our/your 27:52 before God our Father. Believe and be Saved. It's all by faith/belief
@lavenderhearts101
@lavenderhearts101 5 ай бұрын
Hospice or palliative care.
@GeorgeBonez
@GeorgeBonez 5 ай бұрын
@@wendy54321 Now listen. I believe and love my Lord & savior and I do have faith and as weird as it sounds, I know that I will make it thru the death process. After all everyone does but it is very frightening after witnessing someone go through so much unrelenting agony. My dad was the strongest man I ever knew and saw him reduced to an unbelievable frailty. Maybe I need more than a Bible verse on this? Maybe I need some counseling when the time comes closer?
@wendy54321
@wendy54321 5 ай бұрын
@GeorgeBonez Im sorry, I wish I knew what to say. Im glad you know the Lord. Ill pray for a miracle .
@mcqfa
@mcqfa 6 ай бұрын
I have tried to watch this twice but i cannot finish it. It breaks my heart to see old people in pain. And it makes me face my own mortality.
@shaunhall960
@shaunhall960 9 ай бұрын
Not to mention our health care system is predatory.
@charliepiston3169
@charliepiston3169 9 ай бұрын
The corruption of the medical establishment really took off in the early 1900s. "Rockefeller Medicine Men" - E. Richard Brown, 1979.
@RightToConsent
@RightToConsent 9 ай бұрын
There's a very powerful way to fix that this election cycle.
@kerrynight3271
@kerrynight3271 8 ай бұрын
@@RightToConsent Oh yeah? Trump promised a better health care system for four years and did squat.
@mh0862
@mh0862 9 ай бұрын
Inside of every 80 year old man is an 18 year old kid asking, "What the hell happened?"
@marycalhoun7720
@marycalhoun7720 6 ай бұрын
For six days a week, I work as a home health personal care assistant for two elderly ladies, one of whom is 86 and has Alzheimer's and the other who is 92 and has vascular dementia. Each lady lives with her daughter. It is not an easy path to walk for the family members, but I do all I can to lighten the load for the entire family when I am there in their homes. Incidentally, my late husband lived to be 106--I took care of him, too.
@SuzanAirbnb
@SuzanAirbnb 4 ай бұрын
I think you may be a saint!
@harrietjohnson1930
@harrietjohnson1930 4 ай бұрын
God bless you. 💞
@annoin
@annoin 4 ай бұрын
You must have been way younger than your husband.
@sactodan
@sactodan 8 ай бұрын
My mother lived independently and very actively until she had a stroke at age 107 last March and died a day later. She went the way she wanted to go and everyone in her family is thankful. Meanwhile, my wife died in July at 76 from the lingering effects of a stroke six years earlier. My former wife, who is 80, was recently diagnosed with ALS that will prove fatal, and I will turn 80 a month from now and am still working--voluntarily, rather from need, fortunately. I would say that my family has seen all aspects of aging this year.
@mariemedinavd
@mariemedinavd 6 ай бұрын
What was her eating habits?
@user-nt2nm7gf8j
@user-nt2nm7gf8j 5 ай бұрын
R U f***ing serious? ??!!.......Out of all that information you think some bizarre food theory is relevant???????@@mariemedinavd
@christinat.7264
@christinat.7264 9 ай бұрын
I've lived through all of this with my mom who passed at 93.5 years old. It reaches a point where the person is existing not living. There is no recovery. No cure for chronic conditions. But its a time to say goodbye, to have last moments, last photos, last videos. Time for everyone to let go. I did all caregiving in her home, then mine. Im grateful I was able to give her quality care, safety, surrounded by peace and love. It was also very challenging.
@WOLF-ib7xx
@WOLF-ib7xx 6 ай бұрын
No cure. WRONG. Get off the Standard American Diet. Read a book called the Blue Zones. About the longest lived people on the planet, who have great life into their 80 90 100. Number one thing you can do is change what you eat. NO CURE BULLSHIT.
@jenniferfrazier8131
@jenniferfrazier8131 6 ай бұрын
Don’t ignore them then say you helped.
@ChristianRoerbeck
@ChristianRoerbeck 6 ай бұрын
@@jenniferfrazier8131 hello Jennifer happy Sunday and how are you?
@davidpearlactorteacherbizman
@davidpearlactorteacherbizman 5 ай бұрын
I've been at that point since my 30's
@danielmikula1375
@danielmikula1375 9 ай бұрын
This documentary was an early warning, and now it's my reality. I'm in my mid-40s and have been taking care of my aging parents on some level for the past fifteen years, most of it as primary care after they both had debilitating cardiopulmonary problems. Our society needs to wake up to the fact that there are more people like myself who are giving up their personal aspirations to care for disabled elders. It's a stifling burden that will take all to heavy a toll on elders and caregivers alike.
@stephaniekc
@stephaniekc 9 ай бұрын
I was 26 when I took care of my ill mother. It really does take a toll on a person.
@timmyjones1921
@timmyjones1921 9 ай бұрын
In Switzerland there is legal places whom put you to sleep after arranging your funeral where ever you wish to be buried , it's legal if you have chronic health issues like depression , cancer other type illnesses ect... Doctor Ludwig used to be the director but you can find them online.
@Kassandrasson
@Kassandrasson 9 ай бұрын
Do you own assets?
@Cwgrlup
@Cwgrlup 9 ай бұрын
Wow… the only sad part of this post is that the generation that’s old (mine = aka Boomers) has raised such selfish children. I didn’t have kids and clearly didn’t miss anything. I don’t think they would have been any different than you are. Glad I didn’t have selfish children who don’t value their elders. In other societies, for example, India, children honor their parents by touching their feet. In japan, they always shake hands with the eldest first, and the eldest approaches the younger person. Americans lack respect for the wisdom we have as an older generation. You will see one day when your own children throw you away like garbage. It will be your own karma.
@0_________________
@0_________________ 9 ай бұрын
@@timmyjones1921 you will be surprised how many people in China are considering going to swizerland to end their lives when we get old.
@dakota5176
@dakota5176 7 ай бұрын
I’m almost 64 and mostly have pretty ok health, but my problem is so many people in my Family have already died and I don’t really have many friends left, they passed away too.Some days I don’t talk to anyone.I have a dog and it’s really the only thing that keeps me going. I don’t want to live to be too old and suffer everyday. I don’t believe in suicide but if all I do is suffer and become lonelier than I am I might change my mind..loneliness is a major factor in my quality of life and mental health. I have anxiety and ptsd..but I try to stay positive which is hard. I wake up and think another day of struggling. I am on disability and usually eat once a day because I can’t afford food and food banks give you alot of expired food which I’m scared to eat, plus they give you enough food for a few days.. I hope I don’t live too many more years. (I never had children so I’m basically alone with no one to care for me if something happens)
@dianafoster7883
@dianafoster7883 6 ай бұрын
Do you have a Senior center in your community? Or a church where you could meet up with others in your age group?
@agathac6187
@agathac6187 2 ай бұрын
❤❤
@PatriciaAShelton-no6cq
@PatriciaAShelton-no6cq Ай бұрын
You're only 64, you got some good years left. Try to enjoy them.
@k8tina
@k8tina 8 ай бұрын
37:03 My mom-in-law had the same exact situation. She was in the early stages of dementia, and had a tumor (slightly larger than the size of a walnut) removed from her brain last June 2022. It made her dementia worse. Not to mention she was moved from the assisted living facility (where she was staying stable) to a mediocre facility an hour & a half away in October 2022, due to Medicare changing its policies on what facilities it covered. This caused a rapid decline in her physical and mental state to where she lays in bed, can hardly move, barely talks (and when she does it is to imaginary people only she can see), she has to be fed, wear diapers or have a bedpad, and sleeps almost all the time. Her longtime boyfriend (they've been together almost 20 years, but there's no 'common law husband' status in Florida) has been by her side through it all. My husband (her son) tried to be there too. Unfortunately my husband passed away in June 2023. So now I am having to scramble to figure out her finances and the realization that Medicare doesn't cover much of her care in the nursing home is shocking! She has recently depleted ALL of her savings (there's nothing left for her grandkids, which she had deemed in her will that the money from her investment accounts would goto the grandkids, which was never an issue for her only child, my husband, or for me). Went to an attorney with the boyfriend and was told our only recourse is to put her on Medicaid (which the attorney can do the entire application process & get her approved). To say I'm upset and angry at the healthcare system of insurance companies is an understatement!! I always believed Medicare would help prevent the exorbitant costs of medical care for the elderly. It is all a huge lie!! 😡 My apologies for such a long-winded story. With what I'm seeing through my mom-in-law's experience, plus other family members who went through similar over the years, I do not want to end up like this. Yes, we all are going to get old and elderly, but if I am able to have the option to choose, I will end my own life at the first sign of a loss of functionality (whether through the humane way of assisted death or by my own hands). I refuse to suffer like so many elderly people, including family members, have suffered tragically. I will also not put my children, whom I love more than anything, through the horrors of watching me suffer. I want to have a choice in my own death. Watching this program has only convinced me even more of this.
@kandacepatterson7965
@kandacepatterson7965 7 ай бұрын
In humane for them to ha e done the brain surgery on someone like that...I hope you find peace.
@robinfrady5257
@robinfrady5257 4 ай бұрын
I agree with you. From my experience with my parent's Mother and Medicare was to keep her alive as long as possible while actually draining every financial source she had. Fortunately she had signed over her small, humble home to her son but maintained life estate. Had the house still been in her name they would have taken that too. Very sad😢
@simplethings3730
@simplethings3730 8 ай бұрын
My father died at home at the age of 95 in December of 2021. Near the end, we had to change his diapers. This documentary was watered down so it would not be too upsetting to the people who watched it. The problem is the shock of realizing you would have to do things that you never thought you would have to do. Colleges should have a short course where they teach people, and more importantly, expose people to the things that have to be done when people are dying.
@LightyearWisdom
@LightyearWisdom 3 ай бұрын
May god bless you and your families. It is a good idea to include courses as you said in colleges. Children should have lessons on how to be a good child and how to care parents in their old age and share good habits with other students. There should be a mandatory Morale and Discipline exam and students should pass on this till they reach college. I strongly believe this will reduce violence in schools and colleges. Also students should be educated on the importance of why sex is secret and sacred. It is more painful than anything in this world that a parent holding his child on his lap feeling the pain of the child dying of drug issues.
@sandyt8981
@sandyt8981 9 ай бұрын
My stepmom was having a lot of trouble breathing; it turned out to be a tumor near her heart that was pressing against her lungs. The doctor had a long talk with her. She lived alone, she was almost 80, malnourished, and wouldn't have been a good candidate for surgery or chemo. After she went into hospice she died within nine days. I barely got there in time to say good-bye, and although they were giving her medication to ease her pain, I happened to see her when she was struggling to breathe. It sounded like when you suck the end of a drink through a straw; that gurgling sound will haunt me forever. She passed away a few hours after my visit and my first feeling was relief. I couldn't imagine keeping her alive merely to see her suffer more. At some point, people can't be cured. It's very sad.
@irvineal
@irvineal 9 ай бұрын
There are hospice nurses on KZbin who explain end of life things that happen on hospice. That sound you heard might have been a sound known as the death rattle. It is caused by air moving across unswallowed spit and is a common sound at the end of life. I'm sorry for your loss.
@akrossmann1631
@akrossmann1631 9 ай бұрын
​@@irvineal I work in hospice and each being leaves differently so such a statement is not necessarily true. Saying less when one doesn't know is a good motto to live by. Namaste
@frankclements1431
@frankclements1431 9 ай бұрын
but it's the truth, it's the reality we must accept
@Kaledrone
@Kaledrone 8 ай бұрын
@@frankclements1431 the reality is you have the freedom to die before deteriorating too much. If your counter argument is based on religion then it holds no ground.
@grandmajane2593
@grandmajane2593 8 ай бұрын
@@irvineal I'm not sure she really needed to know that information.
@uwsgrrrl9981
@uwsgrrrl9981 8 ай бұрын
My fear is living with extreme pain. To me, it’s worse than death. I’m 72 yo, no children & I worry that I’ll die alone.
@kafizola5695
@kafizola5695 3 ай бұрын
I am in a the same situation. God is with me so I am never alone.
@Honeycombz.
@Honeycombz. Ай бұрын
I’ll pray for you
@mustafeabdi8483
@mustafeabdi8483 12 күн бұрын
If you can get my mssg plz get Qur'an and Read it. That is the ultimate mssg of Creator of this Universe. You will be asked any single second of your life
@marlenefunk2137
@marlenefunk2137 7 ай бұрын
I am 79 and moved from the U.S. to South America 12 years ago. Before retiring I worked many years in elderly abuse, neglect and exploitation. Very few families take care of their elderly in the U.S. and 95% of the exploitation was done by family. I am an only child, well educated and world traveled. No children. I moved to a country that treats their elderely like royalty. If you are over 65 you can do no wrong here. I love the discounts and being at the front of all lines, by law. There are fantastic physicians here because they do not have to jump through hoops to practice medicine. Each of my hips and knee surgeries in the U.S. were over $50,000.00 and here in South America the cost of each is $7,000.00-$12,000.00. There are options outside of the U.S. My career gave me a look at my future, so I had time to plan for myself. I now live in a country where RESPECT is #1 and that is how people treat each other. It is the place to be old, believe me. And it is a beautiful country.
@ps_nyisgone
@ps_nyisgone 7 ай бұрын
wise decision, best wishes. you are right this country doesnt take of the elderly. its heartbreaking and cruel. i also heard someone from phillipeans tell me in that country they also respect and care for eldely with compassion. they told me they will move back there before they get old becuase in the USA they dont care for them at all and in some cases mistreat them when most vulnerable. disgraceful and pure evil.
@Hadenufyet
@Hadenufyet 7 ай бұрын
Gee, where?
@bsaxton6400
@bsaxton6400 9 ай бұрын
I'm 40 years old and suffer from schizophrenia. It's a horrible disease. I'm scared half my life and I have to be careful about noises because they turn into voices. Now imagine suffering from that and being 90 years old laying in bed in a nursing home.
@bsota8513
@bsota8513 9 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear. God bless.
@user-hd1bw3dw2w
@user-hd1bw3dw2w 9 ай бұрын
Actually people with schizophrenia are 6X more likely to get some form of dementia. So you're unlikely to reach that age and even if you do, you won't have voices anymore. You just won't remember anything. But in a couple of decades the meds for schizophrenia will be much better anyway. My uncle had it and in his generation alone the meds improved by a very significant amount.
@bsaxton6400
@bsaxton6400 9 ай бұрын
@user-hd1bw3dw2w I've heard that. I take an injection called Invega. It seems to help me out but it's always worse in the mornings. When I wake up I here people talking to me. The doctor says the invega doesn't give me anxiety but I swear it does. I've never had problems with anxiety until I started taking invega. So they have me on every type of anxiety meds you can think of. It's really changed my life. I no longer want to go into public any more and I don't get hungry. Thank God for insurance because the invega shot cost 1700 dollars a shot! For the most part I just want to be left alone and have things quite. I really worry about loosing my mind and at the same time dealing with the ticks, noises, and voices. I can't watch t.v. any more because they watch you through the t.v. and it's just to noisy. I can't listen to the radio because the noises repeat in my head all day. I guess you can say I'm already loosing my mind I just don't want to get any worse with age. Sometimes I get so afraid I can't even look in a mirror. People have the wrong idea about schizophreniacs, I'm not dangerous or do crazy things. I wouldn't hurt a fly. I'm just socially inadequate now and have to keep things as quite as possible. I have a college degree and have always worked two jobs and had a girlfriend. All that went away. Now I'm stuck on disability and barely can make it from month to month. I have manic attacks if there's to many things going on at one time. I've been to the E.R. 4 times so they can inject me with calming medicine. You try driving while your mind is going 100 miles an hour, you can't control your movements, and you think some one is watching you. It's a horrible disease right up there with alhzeimers.
@jenny-wc8qy
@jenny-wc8qy 8 ай бұрын
I do massive research for my own things & have read many times that schizophrenia is a deficiency...think it's B1 but not your everyday B1, Benfotiamine or Ttfd. I could be wrong on the deficiency, you can search on YT & Google, easy to find. Deficiencies really mess us up. Be well🙏
@cindyeisenberg8367
@cindyeisenberg8367 8 ай бұрын
I have schizoaffective disorder and my biggest fear is not being treated adequately when I’m old and sick, laying in bed scared to death. I’d rather die then have this happen to me.
@Nurse66
@Nurse66 9 ай бұрын
I am a geriatric nurse who is retired…. I watched and held the hands of many people who left this earth in pain..No family was there for some of them….I still believe in Dr.Kavorkian….To some people that sounds like suicide but to those of us caring for these precious people who die in pain and loneliness it is a way to leave this earth with dignity and pain free…. You might change your mind if you knew what I have seen…😢😢😢😢
@beatrixbrennan1545
@beatrixbrennan1545 9 ай бұрын
Instead of intervention to preserve life, maybe just hospice with morphine instead of murdering ones self.
@hjcip3934
@hjcip3934 9 ай бұрын
I read about these stories of these older people who have worthless children that don't come to visit, it's sickening.
@mhmorris2018
@mhmorris2018 9 ай бұрын
@@beatrixbrennan1545absolutely
@mhmorris2018
@mhmorris2018 9 ай бұрын
I’ve been a nurse for almost 40 years and have worked geriatrics, hospice and psych. Hospice/palliative care - NOT euthanasia
@paulanix7561
@paulanix7561 9 ай бұрын
Who are you to decide? You're not God. Every person matters. It will be you one day and you'll say, oh,oh
@tae6093
@tae6093 5 ай бұрын
I’ve worked in a care home for nearly three years now so I experience this firsthand. It’s not all devastating though, there’s so much love and laughter these people can offer in a way you can’t experience in other profession. I genuinely love my residents and the work I do comes from that
@ginnycleary-zq2pu
@ginnycleary-zq2pu 4 ай бұрын
Reply to@Tae - So glad to see your "positive" comnent. Because I have also worked assisting elderly folks, and I really cared for most of the folks I assisted. Seniors have a lot of wisdom and those that are still blessed with a good mind is great to be around them. I have a lot of respect for Seniors. And yes some of them are at times bitter, angry, or lonely. The lonely Seniors just breaks my heart, because many families (younger generations) are not there to visit with them, too busy. Praying 🙏 for all Seniors in our country for they still have a pulse. Still God's children.
@LynnPepperladybiker
@LynnPepperladybiker 7 ай бұрын
My mother, then my sister, had cancer and needed help at the end of life, my two other sisters refused to help so it fell on me, I did it. I was a full-time student with a full-time job, but my sisters, who had more time, refused to help. I have no children; I know that I won't have any assistance when I get old.
@mandibailey9104
@mandibailey9104 9 ай бұрын
Almost 30 years ago I had the pleasure of taking care of a woman who was 106. She was of sound mind and body. She did everything for herself and her roommate. Her surname was the same as mine. I absolutely cherish the wisdom and stories she shared with me. Knowing her made me a better person. I made the mistake of asking her what it was like being 106. She said " I would never wish this hell on anyone. My husband died almost 40 years ago, all 6 of my children are dead, and two of my grandchildren. All of my friends are dead. This is a fate worse than death. " The only reason I remember exactly what she said is because I wrote down patient stories (I did not write down their names) It was a privilege and a pleasure to spend time with and serve WWII era patients. They told me the absolute truth. People of a certain age lose their verbal filter. Those patients are the reason I work in healthcare. The generation I see now are not the same in any way. They are mean, entitled, and abusive (both physically and verbally) It's so very different. I will never turn my back on a patient. They will always receive care and compassion. I no longer work in long term care. For my own sanity I had to make the choice to work in the hospital.
@kerrynight3271
@kerrynight3271 8 ай бұрын
Fascinating comment. Thank you.
@Kaledrone
@Kaledrone 8 ай бұрын
If she did everything for herself and her roommate, why did she need your care?
@mandibailey9104
@mandibailey9104 8 ай бұрын
@@Kaledrone because she was lonely and depressed as well as a bit unsteady, so I needed to be with her when she showered. She didn't want to cook or clean anymore. She wanted to find a way to make her life easier and happier. Personally, I'm thankful she was able to have that at least.
@kathleenroberts6931
@kathleenroberts6931 6 ай бұрын
I never had a filter 😂 I have always been kind, & honesty is important to me. If you ask me what I think, I tell them. Life's too short for useless niceties, I want to be with people who have something to say. I 😊 & talk to strangers, it's good.❤
@justmyopinion9883
@justmyopinion9883 5 ай бұрын
I met lots of patients like the one you describe in my 37 year nursing career. I loved hearing their life stories and I learned so much from them.
@SilverDawn168
@SilverDawn168 9 ай бұрын
As a old man one of the few things that scare me is ending up in some state funded hellhole being spoon fed by someone who makes min wage. Please Lord take me before that happens.😢
@annconforti9294
@annconforti9294 9 ай бұрын
Same
@stacyjaye6350
@stacyjaye6350 9 ай бұрын
Praise God, I'm going to punch my own ticket.
@Itsme-ni9jk
@Itsme-ni9jk 8 ай бұрын
🙏
@glendacastillo6504
@glendacastillo6504 8 ай бұрын
Most nursing homes don't bother to spoon feed the patient.
@archuk6058
@archuk6058 2 ай бұрын
most nursing homes will not spoon feed their patients, they just use feeding tubes bevause they are understaffed and the owners are greedy businessmen. these state funded nursing homes are scam places, storages, $$$ makers. theyre not rehab places, at least in the US. in fact, healthcare in the US is a scam, thats why american doctors are wealthy, they provide very low quality care for a very high price. retire abroad, get your social securiry check somewhere else where human lives are still respected.
@carolkristian1146
@carolkristian1146 7 ай бұрын
I am nearly 70. I have suffered most of my life with autoimmune diseases, and cerebral palsy which has caused severe scoliosis and other problems. The doctors will do anything but provide me with enough pain meds to keep me functional and out of severe discomfort. They will prescribe multiple meds to keep me alive, with 15 minute doctor appointments, where the doctor sits across the room, never touching or comforting me. I had to beg for treatment for depression, as my world closes in. They never ask me about myself, what I'm losing due to increasing disability, if I have any support or friends. I have become a non-existent person. I'm sure many can relate.
@debbiedorr3986
@debbiedorr3986 7 күн бұрын
I am in the am in situation.
@richardbooth4573
@richardbooth4573 7 ай бұрын
I am 70 and the youngest of 3 brothers. Each of us about 5 years apart. all of us alive. Still going strong.
@Cwgrlup
@Cwgrlup 9 ай бұрын
I absolutely don’t want heroic measures to live longer. In fact, as a nurse, I have seen the worst things in ICU that bioethically have been appalling to me. It’s our responsibility to care for our older generations if we insist on shoving every single person into an ICU for care they don’t necessarily ask for or need. The medical community is just as responsible for this problem as is our society at large. Our irrational fear of death and denial of dying is part of the problem. I personally would rather die a good death early than live a long life of suffering as a vegetable in a nursing home.
@ey67
@ey67 9 ай бұрын
Absolutely true
@ey67
@ey67 9 ай бұрын
Living is hard. Dying should be easy. Instead it's about making a buck off a bedridden corpse
@rfgodwin123
@rfgodwin123 9 ай бұрын
And our family members want to hang on to us,I've seen it with my family. Keeping someone alive beyond the point that they should be dead is selfish. Some of the nursing homes I've been in are shameful the environment and energy are disgusting. We should be send those wonderful people off with dignity but corp look at it as a money maker
@JazzyJae88
@JazzyJae88 9 ай бұрын
As an ICU nurse myself, I totally agree with you. I am in awe of what we will put people through for the sake of being “alive”. I’m 35 and have my advanced directive in place with limits and time frames. I want to a meaningful recovery. No trach. No PEG. No nursing home. If I cannot live without those things, live is no longer worth living to me.
@eddenoy321
@eddenoy321 9 ай бұрын
Spot on
@fob1xxl
@fob1xxl 9 ай бұрын
I watched my Mom suffer and die after years of illness and being in a Convelecent home for over 3 years.(1988) She was 78. My Dad , never sick, suffered a heart attack at 89. One week later, he suffered a second and never made it out of the hospital(1989). I lost the love of my life after 40 years in 2017. Two weeks in the hospital, diagnosed with a choice of death, or amputation of both legs above the knee. They chose hospice at home and in two weeks was gone. Age, 66. I am now 78, and am just starting to slow down. I have no one else around to be the way I was for my folks or my spouse. I don't want extended life. I don't want to be a vegetable left to linger alone until my body finally gives up completely. Dying , is not pleasant, especially if you die alone. If all about the afterlife that I have believed is true ? I can't wait. If it isn't ? Well, I guess I'll find out.
@lesliecano4963
@lesliecano4963 9 ай бұрын
How incredible you had 40 years with the love of your life. I pray the end isn’t far. I can’t wait to see my family on the other side.
@cedricliggins7528
@cedricliggins7528 9 ай бұрын
I feel the way you do.
@lesliecano4963
@lesliecano4963 9 ай бұрын
I’m 43. I had the love of my life for 5 years before he took his life. My only son is grown and could care less about me and my career has crumbled under my mental illness. I’ve had a great life and I’m very appreciative. But this is it. I’ve got 5 or 10 years left. Like the man said, this gettin old is for the birds.
@HickYankee
@HickYankee 9 ай бұрын
Great post. Yeah, this is such a difficult issue. Also the issue of dying with dignity is not what many make it out to be. It is not always depression or mental illness to recognize your circumstances and to know you will die alone and plan for how you want it to go. I do this and I know it is just pragmatic, rationalism - not pessimism or depression. I know how I want to live. And how I want to die.
@thetruthandnothingbutthetr6484
@thetruthandnothingbutthetr6484 9 ай бұрын
We’ll look on the bright side, you’ll be dead so you won’t be aware that there is no afterlife
@johnclerk1195
@johnclerk1195 7 ай бұрын
Mom and Dad had retired early at 64, mom lived to 95, dad to 90. They had it all planned out, thankfully. All the estate plans were made about age 80. So, about the time dad started getting more and more weaker and had long since stopped driving, I moved in and I retired, and took care of him. Mom was about as active as anyone much younger than herself. She was using a small weedeater and brushing off the sidewalks and patio at age 94.... Dad had prostate cancer for 30 years, and about the age 83-85 he just couldn't manage enough. They wanted to live until the end, and that's what my sisters and me made sure happened. My sisters were living far away, and only myself was close enough and no existing family or kids was able. I lived with them for nearly 18 years. I learned a lot, the home health nurse was wonderfull! The doctors were amazing and knew the situation enough. I was trained how to flush out all the lines dad had that must be flushed twice a day. The nurse brought the things required, and the meds were delivered. In a sense, we set up a "nursinig home room" in their dining room since going upstairs to their bedroom was impossible. I was perhaps lucky that the assistance I had from all the medical services locally were so helpful. Insurance my parents had was 100% one dad had as part of his retirement package, and it paid for darn near everything. What medicare didn't cover, Anthem paid the rest. Good grief it was so much of a relief. I think I did give up a lot of my own life for them, but just think of everything they did for me, including paying for university. I was an expensive kid hah! Mom's been gone for 6 years, and dad for 10, and 1 of my sisters for 8 years, and there isn't a day I don''t miss them, or regret doing what I did for them. It was a gift from them to me to be able to help them go down the road on life's last journey.
@Anneseye
@Anneseye 2 ай бұрын
Difficult to watch, but essential to face the reality both personally and societally. Thanks, Frontline, for always confronting the tough stuff.
@specialstone9153
@specialstone9153 9 ай бұрын
I found comfort in hearing my ma say that she was not afraid to die, and she died in peace, praise God!
@annissagraves3076
@annissagraves3076 9 ай бұрын
I’m a caregiver and I wish people understood the cost of 24 hour in-home care. It’s beyond the “retirement” we save for over our careers. I want to be able to afford the level of care I give if I need it someday (I’m part of an exceptional team of women; very lucky)
@lashaeleaf8842
@lashaeleaf8842 9 ай бұрын
@nervousbabbs2769
@nervousbabbs2769 9 ай бұрын
Right! YOU ARE AMAZING AND THANK YOU as a child of an elderly parent. but FR +ISNT UNCAPPED CAPITALISM GREAT?! (being sarcastic obvi)
@lesliecano4963
@lesliecano4963 9 ай бұрын
God bless you. I never want to get that old. I have watched my family members deteriorate into broken, lost shells of their former selves. I have mentally deteriorated tremendously by the ripe old age of 43. I’m horrified to think of the comatose, drooling, drain on society I will become in a couple decades. If I can’t get a hold of assisted dying in 10 years I will be a statistic. No gettin old over here. For what? To suffer and die? I’m doing that already.
@HickYankee
@HickYankee 9 ай бұрын
Agreed, there are other problems as well. My father died this year at 82. He needed at least minimal in-home care, as I often provided. My 71 year old stepmother has always acted as if they were struggling financially and did little to take proper care of my father. Two months after he died, she immediately bought a million dollar house with cash (this was their savings not retirement or life insurance and beautiful homes sell in their area for $200k). I have long suspected she was hording money for herself. I am considering taking her to court for neglect of my father. I couldn't care less about money but knowing she had more than anyone in the family and she neglected my father sickens me. I had been begging for years for her to hire some help but she never would - not even wheelchair ramps for the house which I repeatedly offered to buy and install so my dad wouldn't fall down the porch anymore and could get to the doctor. She said it would "make the house look ugly" and "decrease the value" and my dad didn't want me to argue with her so I tried to honor that when he was living but if I'd known she had money I would have taken legal action ten years ago so he could have lived longer and had a richer life. I thought she was doing all she could for him but she seems to have been tolerating him to maximize the money she would have, waiting for him to die.
@beautiful20106
@beautiful20106 9 ай бұрын
Eat healthy
@margomorquecho3760
@margomorquecho3760 2 ай бұрын
Great documentary!! I am 75 and already thinking of what is ahead of me. I have no children or husband. Kind of scary.
@christopherallen9580
@christopherallen9580 2 ай бұрын
I am 66 and am in the same situation and agree its scary
@lauriecraw5033
@lauriecraw5033 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the program. Everybody should watch it and discuss with their family.
@hansludwig4732
@hansludwig4732 9 ай бұрын
My mom was a blessing to herself and all around. Died from a heart attack immediately, 85 years old and still walking every day to her Caffee and preparing her meals. 🙏🙏🙏
@connieadams607
@connieadams607 9 ай бұрын
We cared for my Mother & Father to the end. 24/7 365 days a year. It was the BEST thing we ever did. Never regret the 5 year’s of full time cooking, cleaning, Drs appointments, ER waiting 15 hours was a normal wait. Learned a lot about my parents. They were married 70 years. ❤❤
@hjcip3934
@hjcip3934 9 ай бұрын
Awesome, my parents were married 68 last month.
@alanaadams7440
@alanaadams7440 9 ай бұрын
God bless you 😇
@oldskoolmedia2264
@oldskoolmedia2264 9 ай бұрын
That's wonderful. I'm doing the same thing for my parents. Married 56 years this Dec. 2023.
@connieadams607
@connieadams607 6 ай бұрын
@@oldskoolmedia2264 u r so Lucky your dear parents are still with you 🫶🫶🫶
@lastpme
@lastpme 8 ай бұрын
My mom is 85 and has dementia…her body is strong but her mind is slowly going away. It breaks my heart.
@Adam_12azUSA
@Adam_12azUSA 5 ай бұрын
This is one of the saddest, most real & eye-opening videos I've ever seen on KZbin 😭
@lzrd8460
@lzrd8460 9 ай бұрын
This is so depressing to watch. I’m 72 years old, divorced with no children and retired in Europe as my pension wasn’t enough to live in the States. It has been a wake up call to me to start thinking seriously about becoming too old to care for myself. Other than a bad knee, I’m in good shape, on no meds, eat well and am not overweight. I walk with my dogs for 1,5 hours each day. It’s not aerobic but I’m moving! I figure that my organs will be in good shape and so will leave my body to a medical university here. I really don’t want to keep living if I can’t manage on my own but this country has no programs for just letting ppl die. I think they have a no resuscitation order, at least I hope. Watching this has made me see that I don’t want to live just to be alive. And what a burden it is on society as well. God bless the doctors in this documentary; they seemed like such caring doctors, rare these days.Thank you for uploading.
@cindyingram4072
@cindyingram4072 9 ай бұрын
The nursing home where I work in Georgia charges 5k a month for no care independent apartment, 8k a month for assisted living and 11k a month for "memory care" when you talk to curtains, don't know who you are or anybody else and often relive past trauma. Seems like money poorly spent. The people caring for them certainly aren't seeing any of it
@alrent2992
@alrent2992 8 ай бұрын
Why bother going to the u.s.?? Go to a Latin country. Cost of living is much less. 🙏
@doreenplischke2169
@doreenplischke2169 9 ай бұрын
When my mom begged me to help her end her own suffering, full of cancer, that was one of the toughest moments in our life together. I wish she had have this choice. On the other hand life is ending for most of us in pain. And part of life is suffering. In my mind I cannot believe I was feeling so paradoxical. I placed my mom in hospice. To support a safe and peaceful passing, without machines, without intervention. My own family did not understand but to me that is the best I could do for my mom to help her dying at least in dignity. Loved ones having the space to say their goodbyes. It was a very insightful experience. And I kept thinking. When I am old and sick, I want to die in hospice. We need a lot more hospice and that way would be offering a lot more quality and peace at one’s end.
@NaNa-lt1po
@NaNa-lt1po 9 ай бұрын
Totally agree.
@johnpage6174
@johnpage6174 9 ай бұрын
You did the right thing. I lost my 93 year old mother a year ago. Her time came, and to keep her alive with modern medical treatments would have prolonged her agony. It would have been a terrible disservice to her. She passed away peacefully in hospice
@kelseycoyote6576
@kelseycoyote6576 9 ай бұрын
You made the right decision ❤
@lavenderhearts101
@lavenderhearts101 9 ай бұрын
You did the compassionate thing for your mother❤️ I’m a retired nurse and I want to die is on hospice. I have seen many different ways to die, and the best way to die is on hospice.
@lesliecano4963
@lesliecano4963 9 ай бұрын
@@lavenderhearts101What about assisted death instead of hospice? I hope that is available when my time comes.
@stacyreyes9576
@stacyreyes9576 7 ай бұрын
I miss being a home health aide and caring for elderly patients but agencies don't pay enough. I make more money working from home answering the phone. If the economy wasn't as bad as it is and I didn't have all the responsibilities that I have, I'd go back to it in a heart beat.
@dianafoster7883
@dianafoster7883 6 ай бұрын
I hope you get the opportunity to do that. We need good nurses! ❤
@christinabruce7245
@christinabruce7245 8 ай бұрын
I enjoyed this documentary very much, thank you.
@hjcip3934
@hjcip3934 9 ай бұрын
My Dad is 92 and my Mom is 89 next month. I talk to them on the phone twice a day, and I'm moving down to live near them 1,000 miles away next week. Due to my own serious health issues, I was not able to travel until very recently. Haven't seen them since before the pandemic. Prior to this, I saw them twice a year. I'm blessed that they're still here and that we can all be together instead of me just seeing them a few times a year until they're gone. Zero assistance whatsoever from my brothers, so I'm all alone with this. My dad is in excellent health, my mom had heart attacks years ago and multiple rounds with bladder cancer, but she is good now. I know at this age this can change at any moment. As much as I'm glad that we can spend some time together and I didn't miss this opportunity due to everything that happened during the pandemic, they got four vaccines and both got Covid, don't look forward to what is ahead of me. I am single and this is so hard.
@amandatolleson7740
@amandatolleson7740 9 ай бұрын
I really feel for you! I left my home, 3 grown children and 8 grandchildren and went back to my hometown 4 hours away to take care of my dad. He’s 86 and I came March 14, 2023 and it’s Aug. 13, 2023. My dad has dementia of the Alzheimer’s type. My brother is here but works long hours and is in another state M-F and sometimes there a couple of nights a week. So he can’t always be here for dad’s appts. I’ve done every one of them. It’s a lot. I had not seen him in 4 years when my mother died and I came back for her funeral in June 2022. Had not seen her for 4 years either. I understand what ur going through.
@cindyingram4072
@cindyingram4072 9 ай бұрын
Get support - period. Even if you feel your "fine". Strength to you! Re your brothers. Not much grooming of men to handle caregiving. I'm always shocked when I hear friends who are sending Dad to live with daughters. Dad may not feel comfy with daughter toileting him. Again, strength to you.
@TheBrakedown
@TheBrakedown 8 ай бұрын
God bless you ❤
@thehatedone317
@thehatedone317 7 ай бұрын
Give more time to visit them.. don’t make my mistake for not visiting my parents when they still in this world, now I always sad everytime I want to visit them but they are no longer here:(
@Chinaglo24
@Chinaglo24 6 ай бұрын
I know what your are going thru I had 5 sibling when my mom got sick with cancer I was the only one who help her thru it. I resent the fact when asked if I had other sibling it was hard on me with no help from them. I just want to carry out my responsibity as her daughter in the bible where it says HONOR your MOTHER I did to her death if I do that GOD promise me long life as well so pray I mean get on your knees and help you to get thru this.❣
@namzarf
@namzarf 9 ай бұрын
This documentary series alone--Frontline--makes my monthly contributiuon to PBS so easy and worth every penny. Thanks to everyone involved. This episode was especially important.
@CesarClouds
@CesarClouds 9 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@earthdaddy
@earthdaddy 9 ай бұрын
As someone who can no longer afford to donate, I appreciate you and all those who do.
@bevennmac2195
@bevennmac2195 9 ай бұрын
I appreciate you. Take care
@namzarf
@namzarf 9 ай бұрын
@@earthdaddy ❤
@sachamarshall9187
@sachamarshall9187 6 ай бұрын
My grandmother lived to be 96 years old. She was in excellent health. There was no stopping the inevitable.
@KagomeHigurashi
@KagomeHigurashi 7 ай бұрын
I'm a CNA, and an agency CNA to boot, so, I've been to many different nursing facilities...And really--they aren't the best places for most elderly people...But I also know that they're necessary too. The sad thing is--no facility HAS ENOUGH STAFF. *Ever*. So, the residents don't always get the care that they need. And it's been worse since Covid. There really NEEDS to be more CNAs and Nurses and doctors for this growing elderly population--but without new blood, that won't happen.
@chantalspruill774
@chantalspruill774 9 ай бұрын
My grandmothers on both sides lived to their 80s and my grandfather lived to 90 but it was so stressful watching them all slowly die from dementia. Caring for the elderly is not easy!
@PaperPearls24
@PaperPearls24 9 ай бұрын
Caring for them is hell. It's pure and utter hell. Especially when you move into their home, your own life dies.
@davisholman8149
@davisholman8149 9 ай бұрын
My mom is 86 & sharp sharp as a tack. Her dad live til 94 - bet she does too. Thank goodness I have a horrid spine - I will make my kids drive me up to Oregon & I’ll take a bunch of meds & go ‘home’….wherever that may be. Why stay alive if you are sick & have no quality of life?
@lindadrake2496
@lindadrake2496 9 ай бұрын
Caring for my parents in their home , was an absolute honor .86 a d 92 . What a blessing.
@eedgerton769
@eedgerton769 9 ай бұрын
Well, good for you, sounds like you had nice and cooperative parents. Try taking care of a selfish narcissist sometime.
@irinav8434
@irinav8434 8 ай бұрын
Im scared. My mom and dad are in good health but dad is a grouchy and a political conservative conspiracy theorist.
@elizabethveverka5738
@elizabethveverka5738 9 ай бұрын
This reminds me of my grandmother's final years. She was almost 90 when she passed away. I remember her last few months when I had to put her in a full-time nursing home. One day, she looked at me and said, "look at me! I can't even walk anymore! This is no kind of life!" Her quality of life was not bringing her any joy. As a result, 6 months later, she passed in her sleep. In my heart, I know she deteriorated so quickly once she went into the nursing home. I decorated her room with household items and pics she created, and her favorite music. But in the end, she was finished and finally got to "go home" to be with her family. That gives me peace ❤
@litaylor3543
@litaylor3543 8 ай бұрын
Thank you to all these doctors for going to medical school and being so caring. Frontline is a great show also. Not many shows like this anymore without politics. Thankyou.
@lorislayton835
@lorislayton835 8 ай бұрын
Why are we commenting on a 17 year old documentary that sadly is outdated. Especially after the pandemic. Frontline is a great documentary series, but we need an UPDATED program addressing the unfortunate and worsening needs of aging in 2023.
@yessumyessum6624
@yessumyessum6624 27 күн бұрын
We wanted to comment, so we did. Yes, this needs an update. Absolutely.
@rachelraja7188
@rachelraja7188 9 ай бұрын
Hi. I love the elderly. I volunteer for an elderly couple and i love them like they are my own grandparents. I don't trust many nursing homes due to disgusting abuse that plagues many institutions. I'm also ill with fibromyalgia so its a challenge. I don't have much family but i like to help others. We need to just love on our elderly and appreciate them until the very end. We should introduce elder and nursing care in home economics classes at schools because we all will get old whether we have people in our lives or not who care about us. You know, young people like me become ill and some pass away early. So, what does it matter if we are related or not but to just love on people who are weaker and give them happiness. The worst thing is throwing family away because they become some sort of burden. Thank you care givers,staff and nurses who do take very good care of our sick and elderly. Love over gold. Thanks for this video❤
@gwentie01
@gwentie01 9 ай бұрын
What a heartfelt, brutally honest look at aging and how it affects the family and the aging parent. Thank you so much for taking such a difficult topic and addressing these issues.
@blindsey1043
@blindsey1043 4 ай бұрын
Yes Instead of saying to kill elderly it just gives the pros & cons very thought provoking at 40 yrs old I need dnr& life insurance
@richardcamacho7276
@richardcamacho7276 4 ай бұрын
I almost died from near sepsis over a year ago and was debilitated for a time but mostly recovered now. While in the hospital I realized how few persons can truly be relyed upon. I got on a fitness kick and feel better than I have in 30 yrs, I am 60. I realize I am my own best defense for maintaining independence. I will not let myself get in that position again as much as I can help it. I exercise every day faithfully and believe this is better than storing money away for retirement.
@susanmann5286
@susanmann5286 7 ай бұрын
I live in Senior Housing. I try not to get upset by the number of professionals who ask me, "Can't your son do it?" There is truly is a major assumption about this. I have no desire to "move forward" if I get to the point where I see some people. We should all be given a choice. The lack of care would be horrible.
@SyriusStarMultimedia
@SyriusStarMultimedia 9 ай бұрын
If you are 50-60 with minor ailments start exercising right now and do not stop. 1-2 hours everyday no matter what. Walk and stretch at the minimum. Or else.
@TexasGal.
@TexasGal. 9 ай бұрын
Good advice
@ey67
@ey67 9 ай бұрын
Or Else happens anyway.
@SyriusStarMultimedia
@SyriusStarMultimedia 9 ай бұрын
@@ey67 You are correct but or else can be mitigated. The human body was designed to heal itself. All it requires is a little assistance and determined self care.
@ey67
@ey67 9 ай бұрын
@@SyriusStarMultimedia Nice try. Worked in hospitals for 30. Yrs. Dream on.
@eddenoy321
@eddenoy321 9 ай бұрын
@@ey67 Very true. You can delay, but the "or else' is coming anyway.
@LilaDWashington
@LilaDWashington 9 ай бұрын
This broke my heart. It is amazing that this aired in 2006 -- it is now 2023, and us kids that were born in the late 60's and early 70's are dealing with this with our parents. It makes me keenly aware of my own mortality. I have no kids and I am single -- who is going to care for me when I am my mother's age? I can only pray that I have continued mobility and health for a long time, my mind remains sharp and that I have an appreciation for the simple things in life -- watching a sunrise or sunset, reading books, and having a few good friends.
@user-bd3gt9jt1x
@user-bd3gt9jt1x 9 ай бұрын
I'm 57 and I do have two young boys, both young teenagers. I don't want nor expect them to care for me when I'm older. I feel I'll be such a burden to them. Medicine has prolonged our lives though living longer into the 80s or even 90s doesn't mean it'll be a good life. We'll have a large population in their 80s with no one to care for them sad to say.
@giftbyliz8702
@giftbyliz8702 9 ай бұрын
same here. no kids and I’m in my mid 50”s, my husband is in the 80’s. I have the option of going back to my country when the time comes but I really like it here medical care wise and the convenience of pretty much a lot of things better than where Im from. it is worrisome and doesn’t help when you already are prone to worry
@33Jenesis
@33Jenesis 9 ай бұрын
I am in the same boat. I may move back to the country I came from because the nursing home and medical care are cheaper. My money may stretch longer.
@Kyle-gb9dq
@Kyle-gb9dq 9 ай бұрын
I'm with you. Born in 68. I have my hands full with my parents
@marianmoses9604
@marianmoses9604 9 ай бұрын
I am in the same boat. Tried to start a family 25 years ago but it didn’t happen. Now 61 and divorced and single. Thankfully I am in excellent health and in way better condition than 99% of my age group, but once one passes 60 there simply are no guarantees and life can change overnight. Euthanasia needs to be an option for competent adults. I think it will inevitably become more widely available over the next 20 to 30 years as more and more people reach old age childless.
@community1949
@community1949 5 ай бұрын
I think what is stifling the physicians is the "15" minute limit to see each patient. It didn't used to be this way. I know because I retired from a hospital.
@chefscorner7063
@chefscorner7063 7 ай бұрын
I turned 60 years old this year (2023). My brother and sister are both much older than I, I have no children and am single. COVID and a recent severe illness that left me partially disabled and also took my retirement savings, has left me feeling something I can't put into a single word... smh
@renzo6490
@renzo6490 8 ай бұрын
Insane! I have no family. No children. No partner. No one who will inherit anything when I die. I have no life’s work that I need to accomplish. I have no fear of death. I have NO fear of death! To be kept alive like some of these people is, to me, cruel…a form of torture under the guise of care. I MUST be allowed to end my life when I want to.
@Michael-cb5nm
@Michael-cb5nm 8 ай бұрын
It is torture isn’t it? Bedridden, demented, fearful, depressed souls kept alive…for what?
@Jesus_Saves_Believers
@Jesus_Saves_Believers 4 ай бұрын
Yep.
@laraoneal7284
@laraoneal7284 3 ай бұрын
God bless you @renzo6490.
@AliciaM5555
@AliciaM5555 3 ай бұрын
@cyrusdubash3097
@cyrusdubash3097 3 ай бұрын
I understand totally. I feel the same way.
@michellebowers8652
@michellebowers8652 9 ай бұрын
After seeing this video I absolutely never want to accept a feeding tube to be kept alive, barely aware and completely bed bound, drugged up to try to alleviate terrible pain. I think so many family members are afraid to let go, and don’t want to make the decision to end their parent’s life even when it is the most compassionate thing to do to end their suffering. My own mother was a nurse and she has been telling me for 40 years that she doesn’t want to be kept alive by artificial means. I am lucky that I know her wishes.
@peterb3181
@peterb3181 4 ай бұрын
Touching, moving, informative, thought-provoking. Thank you.
@billwalsh388
@billwalsh388 4 ай бұрын
Thank you PBS Frontline for yet another informative program.
@rosemariecollard8620
@rosemariecollard8620 9 ай бұрын
I am 70 and have survived for a year after undergoing chemo and surgery for stage 4 ovarian cancer. I am doing well right now but I am aware of the chances of it coming back. I have spoken with my daughter about assisted dying, she lives in a state where it is legal. Quality of life is important to me, and so is my independence. Death is just the inevitable end for all of us.
@barboglesby2162
@barboglesby2162 9 ай бұрын
Sending prayers and hugs.
@maryellenblount6376
@maryellenblount6376 9 ай бұрын
I believe it! My parents are about to turn 87 and 91. They are currently in assisted living and the amount of people even older than them residing there is astounding. My Dad says "we are living too long" thanks to medical science. It comes with many issues.
@cl5193
@cl5193 9 ай бұрын
Just because we can doesn't mean we should.
@maryellenblount6376
@maryellenblount6376 9 ай бұрын
​@@cl5193absolutely!
@brianal7143
@brianal7143 8 ай бұрын
@@cl5193exactly! I'm an RN and the hospital is basically a merry go round for elderly with chronic illnesses. They're tired, their families are exhausted, it's hard to watch. People need to be realistic about aging.
@leighyorgason6702
@leighyorgason6702 8 ай бұрын
Its frightening to think if you arent leaping around like a 16 year old that you should be dead.
@lesleyhall8644
@lesleyhall8644 8 ай бұрын
Kudos to the filmmakers! Very thought provoking. Do other countries have this aging problem? Would love to see another documentary on the differences.🤞
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