
Working Life: If you like people, you will like geriatric medicine
'My interest in older people started during my medical training, when I was a SHO (senior house officer). I came across all of these older people with fascinating stories.
'One patient had fought in both world wars. Imagine that. Another was a messenger for James Connolly during the 1916 Rising. She told me they used young girls as messengers as they felt the British army wouldn't shoot them. This woman used to run through the back streets of Dublin, behind the GPO.
'If you like people, I mean really like people, you will like geriatric medicine. When I was younger, I was very taken by Jacques Cousteau and wanted to be a marine biologist. In hindsight, I'm not sure I'd have lasted long.
'Anyone who knows me will be aware of how much I spoke out on behalf of older people during covid. I was subsequently asked to be an Age Friendly ambassador. A starting point for me is the importance of an age-friendly society. You'd imagine it would be a given, but it's not.
'If you look at it from a tech point of view, there's a real danger for older people that what should be enabling is becoming isolating. It's a real bugbear of mine how any software company can get a licence for tech that hasn't been road-tested on older people.
'My dad, Dermot Collins, is a lifelong GAA fan. Yet when he's going to matches now, he's expected to use an electronic ticket wallet. It's complicated. That's an example of tech dis-enabling people. It starts a pattern of isolation.
'Hospitals need to up their game, too, when it comes to older people. They should be designed with the most vulnerable in mind, but they are not. Elderly patients are expected to book outpatient appointments using online systems. On wards, the most private conversations can be overheard. It's appalling. I know our hospitals are in a rush to go paperless, but we need to be sensible about what we want to achieve.
'Monaghan Hospital is doing a good job of trying to make its campus more age-friendly. Physical improvements include parking spaces closer to the entrance, a new access ramp, improved toilet facilities, and universal-design compliant seats.
Age Friendly Ireland is an appointed Shared Service of local government. Each local authority has an Age Friendly ambassador

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Irish Sun
a day ago
- The Irish Sun
Lucy Letby's life behind bars revealed – from £33-a-week to spend on chocolate & TWICE as many visits as other prisoners
LUCY Letby's enhanced prisoner status gives her a staggering £33 a week to spend on sweets and chocolate. The former nurse can also receive twice as many visits as other prisoners, after being fast-tracked from standard status. 5 Lucy Letby was convicted of killing seven babies Credit: PA 5 The nurse worked at the Countess of Chester Hospital in the North-West Credit: PA 5 The nurse reportedly gets to spend £33 on sweet treats in the prison canteen Credit: PA She is now imprisoned in unit four of the only purpose-built private prison in the UK - HMP Bronzefield. Now an enhanced prisoner, Letby is given £33 a week to spend in the prison canteen where regular prisoners are only given £19.80. Some prisoners are bumped down to basic status as a punishment, which gives them only £5.50 per week. Read More on Lucy Letby All prisoners are given status reviews every 28 days, but A source told the MailOnline that the killer nurse was upgraded because of fears that she may be attacked by other inmates. The source said: ' 'It grates with officers though - she's committed the worst crimes possible and here she is on the enhanced unit with all the benefits that come with it. Most read in The Sun 'Again the real reason she is here is safety, she would be attacked on any other unit.' Letby reportedly has shared a cell with a former prison officer who was jailed after having sex with an inmate. I defend baby killers like Lucy Letby – bombshell new theory could FREE her but I know real truth… & it's NOT medical The inmate is the fourth woman in British history to be given no hope for parole after committing her string of chilling murders. Her first confirmed victim was a boy born in June 2015, who, despite being born prematurely, was described as being "stable". Letby came on shift at 7.30pm that same day and, by 8.26pm, the boy's condition was "deteriorating rapidly". He died twenty minutes later after air was deliberately injected into his bloodstream. That boy's twin sister became ill just 28 hours later after "purple blotches" broke out across her body - symptoms shared with her brother. Thankfully, that baby survived. 5 Some have cast doubt on Lucy Letby's conviction Credit: Reuters However, another two babies died under the nurse's care that same month - one of which ingested air and the other being killed when air was injected into her bloodstream. More Finally, Letby was found to have killed two more babies on June 23 and 24 2016. The killer nurse was arrested on July 3, 2018, and faced a three-year court battle before She had been working at the Countess of Chester Hospital while at large. Despite her conviction, Former health secretary Jeremy Hunt said that, although the victim's family must be at the 'forefront' of politician's minds, there is 'doubt on what actually happened'. He added: 'They are not conspiracy theories dredged up from far-flung reaches of the internet.' The former health secretary and Tory chancellor said that 14 paediatric specialists ruled that the deaths of the babies had been down to natural causes. 5 Health secretary Jeremy Hunt has said that the inmate's case should be reopened Credit: PA


Irish Examiner
2 days ago
- Irish Examiner
Diary of a Gen Z Student: I'm just naturally this pale — and fake tan is more effort than it's worth
A few months ago, I got a tetanus vaccine booster. Afterwards, the nice lady who gave me the vaccine asked me to stay seated in the waiting room for a little longer than usual. She said I looked 'a little too pale'. She was concerned I might faint. Now, I was feeling perfectly fine and tried to protest this precaution. 'I'm always this pale', I offered, but she wasn't convinced. So, I was sat down and given a glass of water. Twenty minutes later, when the lady relented to my naturally pale disposition, I was free to go. This isn't the first time people have expressed concern for my health, due to the evident lack of melanin in my skin. As a teen, my concerned mother considered anaemia or lack of sleep. But iron supplements and sleep routines did little to improve things. In Ireland, being too pale isn't usually considered a good thing. We think paleness looks like poor health. But we've come up with the perfect solution: it may smell like chicken curry mixed with Custard Cream biscuits, and it may turn your skin more tangerine than sun-kissed, but fake tan is a part of our culture — like Guinness, and being shouted at for leaving the immersion on. From the age of 12, most girls in Ireland start to wear fake tan. At first, they're lashing the tan on the night before a disco in the local GAA. Then it becomes more routine. Every week, you might put on a fresh layer. You'll be told that it looks like you just stuck your hand into a packet of cheese-flavoured Doritos, but it's better than being told you look like you've got an iron deficiency. Every year, we go months on end without seeing a clear sky in Ireland. But by God, we don't want to look like it. Even if it was just for the ankles poking out the bottom of your school trousers, the status quo meant that those ankles needed to have a suggestion of sun exposure, at the very least. It didn't matter if it was January. The problem with fake tan for me is always the amount of effort it demands. Exfoliating, shaving, moisturising, and applying the tan. And then a few days later, you need to start scrubbing the tan off, before it begins to resemble scales on your knees and elbows. Oh, the things we do for beauty. I never particularly enjoyed the process, so, for most of my teens, it was only out of obligation that I wore it. I couldn't fathom going to a junior disco with my milk-bottle legs glowing in the dark. I wasn't prepared to be the only one going au natural. Being tanned was an obsession. When I first visited a country that didn't idealise tanned skin, it was honestly surprising to me. I was trying to buy soap in the Philippines and noticed that all of the soaps advertised their 'skin-lightening' properties. Of course, in many countries, the idealisation of paleness is a terrible relic of colonialism. But seeing those 'skin-lightening' products lined up on the shelves of a shop, cemented my previous understanding of beauty as something that is constructed. Over the past few years, I've sort of let go of the idea of having tanned skin. It could be my frontal lobe developing, but I'm just not bothered by being pale anymore — especially if it means I can avoid routinely dying my bed sheets orange. Maybe I've lost patience for the tyranny of exfoliating and moisturising and exfoliating again. But I've laid down my tanning mitt. I haven't touched a bottle of tan for years now. My tanning breakup was unintentional, really, I just stopped worrying about being the one with the light-reflecting legs on a night out. I was able to see fake tan as a product invented by people who wanted to make money, not a necessity for beauty. Being told my pale skin makes me look a bit unwell by the kind lady giving me a vaccine may have been a low blow a few years ago, but now I've got this column to channel my frustrations into. And that vaccine was certainly helpful, while I was thinking about how to discuss my rocky relationship with fake tan as a pale and pasty Irish girl. Maybe I look like I'm lacking in vitality and sun exposure. But at least it has been a few years since I was last told that my hand looks like it was rooting around a bag of Cheese Doritos. A win is a win. Read More Gen Z Student: Knowing my own essays will be graded against the work of AI is disheartening


Irish Examiner
2 days ago
- Irish Examiner
Working Life: If you like people, you will like geriatric medicine
'My interest in older people started during my medical training, when I was a SHO (senior house officer). I came across all of these older people with fascinating stories. 'One patient had fought in both world wars. Imagine that. Another was a messenger for James Connolly during the 1916 Rising. She told me they used young girls as messengers as they felt the British army wouldn't shoot them. This woman used to run through the back streets of Dublin, behind the GPO. 'If you like people, I mean really like people, you will like geriatric medicine. When I was younger, I was very taken by Jacques Cousteau and wanted to be a marine biologist. In hindsight, I'm not sure I'd have lasted long. 'Anyone who knows me will be aware of how much I spoke out on behalf of older people during covid. I was subsequently asked to be an Age Friendly ambassador. A starting point for me is the importance of an age-friendly society. You'd imagine it would be a given, but it's not. 'If you look at it from a tech point of view, there's a real danger for older people that what should be enabling is becoming isolating. It's a real bugbear of mine how any software company can get a licence for tech that hasn't been road-tested on older people. 'My dad, Dermot Collins, is a lifelong GAA fan. Yet when he's going to matches now, he's expected to use an electronic ticket wallet. It's complicated. That's an example of tech dis-enabling people. It starts a pattern of isolation. 'Hospitals need to up their game, too, when it comes to older people. They should be designed with the most vulnerable in mind, but they are not. Elderly patients are expected to book outpatient appointments using online systems. On wards, the most private conversations can be overheard. It's appalling. I know our hospitals are in a rush to go paperless, but we need to be sensible about what we want to achieve. 'Monaghan Hospital is doing a good job of trying to make its campus more age-friendly. Physical improvements include parking spaces closer to the entrance, a new access ramp, improved toilet facilities, and universal-design compliant seats. Age Friendly Ireland is an appointed Shared Service of local government. Each local authority has an Age Friendly ambassador