Resources

Past Presentation

Palliative Care is Good Care | January 25, 2024

Date of Presentation: January 25, 2024

Type: Past Presentation  

Audience: Clinical  Community  

Program: Dementia Caregiver Support ECHO  

Keywords: #caregiver training  #communication  #dementia care  #palliative care  

In this series of presentations, Dr. Tom Teasdale, Dr.P.H., Presidential Professor Emeritus Hudson College of Public Health at the University of Oklahoma, discusses palliative care with a focus on indigenous elders living with dementia. Dr Teasdale, contrasts Palliative Care to Hospice Care, gives examples of how western palliative care programs can be culturally safe and shares examples of how indigenous traditions make palliative care better.

Recording:

Presented by:

Thomas A Teasdale, DrPH, FGSA, FAGHE

Dr. Tom Teasdale, DrPH, FGSA, FAGHE is a health educator with 40 years in the fields of public health, geriatrics, and gerontology.  He retired from full-time University service in 2022 and returned as a volunteer part-time faculty member. He serves on several national committees, has developed many educational products for instruction in aging, and has authored over 60 publications/chapters.  He worked for nearly 20 years jointly at the Houston Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, TX.  In 2003, he moved to Oklahoma to join the Oklahoma City Veterans Affairs Medical Center and the University of Oklahoma Department of Geriatric Medicine.  At the VA, he led the Geriatrics and Extended Care Service education mission and served as the Oklahoma site leader for the VISN 16 Mental Illness Research Education and Clinical Center (MIRECC).  In the College of Medicine Geriatrics Department, he led the department’s education mission, was PI of the HRSA-funded Oklahoma Geriatric Education Center, was associate director of the Oklahoma Healthy Aging Initiative, and concluded as vice chairman of the Department.  In 2015, he moved to the University of Oklahoma Hudson College of Public Health where he served as chair of the Department of Health Promotion Sciences for six years.  His interests focus on evaluation of health care initiatives and workforce development with priority populations experiencing disparities.  He continues as co-PI of the University of Oklahoma GWEP (https://dcn.ouhsc.edu/) and leads the evaluation efforts for several tribal health care initiatives.

Resources Provided:

Date added: January 25, 2024