The Good Men Project
Become a Premium Member
We have pioneered the largest worldwide conversation about what it means to be a good man in the 21st century.
Your support of our work is inspiring and invaluable.
I Don’t Want To Be a Caregiver
Some people simply are not suited for and can’t be a caregiver for their elderly loved one.
By Ninutsa Nadirashvili
Every human is a different, unique individual and has a right to choose what they want to do in their life. Society often expects people to conform to certain roles and take on certain commitments without the emotional and physical stresses that they involve. Some people simply are not suited for and can’t be a caregiver for their elderly loved one. The impact that this responsibility has on an individual’s health, finances and private life is not to be underestimated. In this article, we will guide you through the steps you can take when you can’t be a caregiver.
Judy-santamaria
Lars-hansson
Sigrid-stjernsward
Ninutsa-nadirashvili
Annette-curtino
Paular-sherwood
Area-agencies-on-aging
Research-on-family-caregivers
National-association-of-area-agencies-on
Good-men-project
Take-care
New-directions
Seacoast frontline healthcare workers get first COVID vaccines
By Karen Dandurant
One of the people giving the inoculations was nurse practitioner Leslie Gurrisi.
“I am so excited to be involved in this,” Gurrisi said. “This is a historic moment. I will be getting my vaccine as soon as I can. We need this pandemic to end and I think this is the beginning of that.”
Gurrisi said they would give 48 doses on Wednesday and will begin the next round Thursday morning. The Pfizer vaccine arrived at Exeter Hospital Tuesday, a day after arriving in New Hampshire. On Friday, it became the first COVID-19 vaccine to be approved by the FDA.
Exeter-hospital
New-hampshire
United-states
Maine
York-hospital
Matthew-bennett
Karen-dandurant
Deb-vasapolli
Nick-meehan
Jakob-kissel
Mary-van-liew
Melissa-voisine
COVID vaccine arrives in NH, Maine for highest-risk groups
By Karen Dandurant
Seacoast hospitals and nursing homes are expecting their first doses of a COVID-19 vaccine, which began arriving Monday in New Hampshire and Maine, hopeful this development marks the beginning of the end of the COVID-19 pandemic.
New Hampshire officials said the first shipment of the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine was unloaded, processed and prepared for immediate distribution to at-risk health workers, including front line clinical staff providing direct patient care.
“New Hampshire is ready to hit the ground running to do our part in delivering this game-changing vaccine,” Gov. Chris Sununu said in a prepared statement. “It is an all-hands-on-deck effort for one of the most important undertakings in the history of our state. The state stands ready to get to work and distribute this life-saving vaccine to the citizens of our state.”
Strafford-county
New-hampshire
United-states
Maine
York-hospital
Eastern-maine-medical-center
Karen-dandurant
Maggie-hassan
Matt-bennett
Vanessa-stafford
Pat-clary
Nirav-shah
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.