AARP blog recognizes Marilyn Gugliucci's Learning by Living nursing home immersion program
AARP blogger Sally Abrahms on May 31, 2012 in a column titled "Putting Yourself in the Other Guy’s Shoes" listed the UNE College of Osteopathic Medicine's Learning by Living nursing home immersion program as one of the few programs that allow caregivers or healthcare professionals the opportunity to experience issues of aging from a patient's perspective.
The Learning by Living program was designed by Marilyn Gugliucci, Ph.D., director of geriatric research in COM. The program allows medical students and students from other healthcare disciplines the chance to spend two weeks living side by side with residents in a nursing home. They’re given a diagnosis, which sometimes includes using a wheelchair or walker 24/7, eating and engaging in activities with residents.
Gugliucci has been placing students in nursing homes since 2005 and has seen 28 students complete the program thus far. The program, Gugliucci hopes, not only imbues health care professionals with empathy and insight, but will attract more medical students to the field of geriatrics. At a time when the boomer masses are aging, the ratio of geriatric specialists is falling. Read the AARP blog.