(Quebec) Don’t talk to Guy Trotier about leaving his home. Like the vast majority of seniors, he wants to live at home as long as possible. Here, in this building that he has lived in for more than 25 years, in the heart of the Saint-Roch district, in Quebec.
But during a hospital stay for a day’s gallbladder operation, two women showed up at his bedside. He quickly understood: “I think you want to place me,” he told them, defiantly.
No way ! And he returned home.
” I am well. I don’t want to go anywhere else,” the 87-year-old man tells me, suddenly getting up from his chair, proud to prove to me the strength of his legs.
It was she who unraveled his tax papers to provide the necessary information so that he could keep his low rent that was being threatened with being taken away.
She was the one who signed him up for a Meals on Wheels service which delivers meals to him five days a week, so that he can eat better.
It was also Marie-Josée Girard who accelerated the process for him to consult a physiotherapist. Since then, he has been doing “squats” while washing dishes. While leaning on the sink, he must bend his knees. After three sets of ten, the plates are clean and the thighs regain tone.
“When it comes to walking, I have less and less difficulty,” confirms Guy Trotier, who now manages to go out, with his walker, to go to the grocery store and get some fresh air.
We are far from the trembling man who fell out of his bed.
“I was trying to cover it up,” he admits, blaming his pride. But the warning signs did not escape the delivery man who plays the role of “sentinel.”
The “sentinels” and the “navigators” are the two key roles of an innovative formula of social geriatrics launched by an extraordinary doctor, Dr. Stéphane Lemire (see other text).
The Friendly Service, which has been providing home help for 45 years in Lower Town Quebec City, served as a sort of incubator for him. Today, there are six social geriatrics projects throughout Quebec. Soon, there will be 20, announced the Minister responsible for Seniors, Sonia Bélanger, who presented a plan of about a hundred measures to deal with the aging of the population two weeks ago.
So much the better ! Because social geriatrics works small miracles.
Dr. Lemire’s AGES Foundation has trained some 6,000 sentinels to spot abnormal signs of aging in seniors and alert navigators who can then support seniors.
This is how Marie-Josée Girard found a family doctor for Pierrette Bergeron, who welcomes us with a rather alert step into her apartment. “Before, I tried to get up from my chair and I felt like a 90-year-old mother,” jokes the lady who is only 82.
Ms. Bergeron also had problems with her neighbors who complained that she was making too much noise. The navigator realized she was playing the television too loudly because of a hearing problem.
To lower the volume, she first lent him a voice amplifier which she placed on his ears. Then she convinced her to see a specialist who made her hearing aids.
At first, Pierrette Bergeron was reluctant. “I had some when I was younger and I found them so heavy that I threw them away,” the lady explains to me, while the navigator takes the opportunity to take care of her faulty phone.
By building trust with elders and being attentive to their overall environment, navigators often find simple solutions that defuse problems.
“The services currently are not configured to really meet the needs of the person, but to deal with problem x which is supposed to be resolved quickly with just a pill,” laments Marie-Josée Girard.
Social geriatrics serves as a link between seniors and the health system. It is the link in a network which has many flaws.
“I am worried,” says Marie-Josée Latouche, among the too few family doctors who devote themselves to home visits to vulnerable patients. Are we able to serve this entire aging population who will need services? »
For her, social geriatrics can take over when medicine reaches its limits, sometimes for trivial reasons. “If I turn to social geriatrics, I have a great answer. And I don’t know where else I would look for that answer,” she says.
For one of her patients, for example, the doctor had not been able to obtain blood tests for years, which prevented her from following up important illnesses.
“She was afraid of injections,” explains the navigator, Marie-Josée Girard, who took matters into her own hands. By securing the patient, she managed to take a first blood test with a very patient nurse. Subsequently, she accompanied the lady to a sampling center who ended up saying: “It went well, I could come back here by myself. »
Since then, the doctor has been able to provide adequate follow-up.
This shows that seniors sometimes need advanced health care to stay in shape. But often, they just need a touch of humanity to maintain their autonomy.