Continuing Education for Senior Care Professionals
All Courses listed on this page are in the process of attaining approval from the National Association of Long-Term Care Administrator Boards
Anticipated date for this LIVE, interactive course is October 24th from 9am until 4pm. Cost will be $30 and includes 6 NAB CEUs.
The registration link will be posted here as soon as it is approved by NAB
Healthy Lifestyles and Nutrition to Improve Resident Wellbeing: 6 Hours
Objectives
Circadian Rhythms and Sleep (60 minutes)
- Identify the effects of poor sleep on older adults’ physical health, including increased inflammation, pain, and dysregulated blood sugar.
- Explain the relationship between sleep disruption and emotional/behavioral changes such as irritability, reduced energy, and cognitive fog.
- Analyze common causes of circadian rhythm disruption in older adults (e.g., nocturia, reflux, medication schedules, poor lighting).
- Apply evidence-based strategies to improve sleep hygiene and circadian rhythm regulation in older adults.
Nutrition for the Older Adult (60 minutes)
- Describe how changes in nutrient absorption and utilization in older adults affect stress, cognition, and chronic illness progression.
- Identify specific nutrient deficiencies (Vitamin D, B12, iron, calcium, fiber) and their role in worsening cognitive and emotional wellbeing.
- Explain the connection between dehydration, constipation, and symptoms such as irritability, fatigue, and brain fog in older adults.
- Implement strategies to improve hydration and bowel function that support resident behavior, cognition, and mood stability.
- Recognize sensory changes (taste, smell, swallowing difficulties) that contribute to reduced food intake in older adults.
- Develop individualized strategies to enhance nutrition and increase healthy food intake in collaboration with occupational therapy.
Oral Health and Cognition (30 minutes)
- Describe how oral health problems (tooth loss, gum disease, dry mouth) contribute to inflammation, pain, and cognitive decline.
- Identify practical interventions to address oral health challenges and support older adult wellbeing.
Hearing Loss and Resident Wellbeing (30 minutes)
- Explain how hearing loss impacts cognition, balance, mood, energy levels, and blood sugar regulation.
- Evaluate interventions (environmental modifications, hearing aids, apps) to improve communication and reduce isolation in older adults with hearing loss.
Creating Safe and Empowering Environments (60 minutes)
- Identify the impact of sensory changes, trauma history, and perceived lack of safety on resident stress and behavior.
- Apply trauma-informed approaches to reduce triggers and promote empowerment for older adults.
- Develop environmental strategies to address sensory sensitivities related to noise, lighting, movement, and smells.
Addressing Nervous System Dysregulation (60 minutes)
- Recognize signs of sympathetic nervous system dominance in older adults (e.g., irritability, agitation, restlessness).
- Apply strategies such as redirection, restructuring, and distress tolerance techniques to reduce agitation and improve resident regulation.
Behaviors as Communication (60 minutes)
- Interpret challenging resident behaviors through a lens of physical, emotional, or environmental unmet needs.
- Use backward chaining to identify triggers contributing to stress responses and difficult behaviors.
- Apply effective communication strategies to explore physical issues (pain, illness), emotional concerns, and environmental stressors.
- Demonstrate skills in case-based application by analyzing a resident scenario and identifying the underlying needs behind the behavior.
- Integrate strategies across sleep, nutrition, oral health, sensory adjustments, and trauma-informed care to create holistic care plans that enhance resident wellbeing.
Note: This course is presented via live webinar. You must actively participate during the course in addition to passing an end of course quiz.
Additional Note: In Tennessee, online, interactive training courses are acceptable as continuing education for Assisted Care Living Facility Administrators (Page 14)