Book Review Of Making Grey Gold By Timothy Diamond

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In a review of Making Grey Gold, which is a compelling evaluation of nursing home caregiving, the reading seem more like a revelation into the unknown world of the aged and/or disabled, and not just another book. Moreover, the beginnings of the book set the stage for a real life sequence unfolding in each sentence, and each chapter to the very end. The effectiveness of the book may bring current policies for nursing home care and procedures into question; however the book is more appropriate for adults considering nursing homes as an option, adult children in charge of their parents care and the staff that are employed or pending employment in such an institution. Author, Timothy Diamond called his work a project ( ackn…xiv), but from the …show more content…

In other words, the course and teachings focused on the mechanics of a human body that will require maintenance. This is a compelling realization into what it is like to be a resident in a nursing home whose goal is to only respond to thirst, hunger, toileting, medication needs (only with physicians approval) and injury to residents. While reading Making Grey Gold, there is an eerie similarity to prison …show more content…

This is a chilling indictment and warrants an honest answer. In addition, many residents remember their pass occupations in the same fields where they were now recipients of the service to which they complain. Diamond notes that common frailty has now come to mean the life of a pauper (p 151). It seems that senior’s long working life is a consequence, instead of a benefit. This brings the evaluation of Diamond’s book to the theory behind nursing homes. The author’s argument seems to bring into question that nursing homes are a commodity, from this standpoint; one would have seen nursing home practices and teachings behind closed doors to come to this conclusion (p 169). In Diamond’s semi undercover research, he notes that regardless of patient resident’s emotional feelings of just needing someone to talk to or wipe a tear from their eye, there is no time for that….the work must continue, moved to the next patient [paraphrase, p

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