Volunteer Profile

Darryl B. Rolfson

University of Alberta

On-Demand Programs

  • Practice Foundations: Adult Guardianships and Trusteeships (On-Demand)

    More and more, people are losing capacity without doing estate planning, precipitating the need for guardianship and trusteeship for their affairs to be managed. Further, the rise in young adults who require extra help, but not full guardianship and trusteeship, has led to an increase in supported decision-making as the Act allows for more dignity to the adult who may not have full capacity. This program explores foundational topics designed to support practitioners who want to start doing AGTA work or who want to revisit the basics. These on-demand programs were originally presented on May 28, 2024. The total running time for each presentation ranges between 1 hour to 1 hour, 28 minutes.
  • The Brain and Aging (On-Demand)

    Canada’s population is aging, and issues of concern to older adults will have growing implications for medical and legal practice. Explore topics such as the demographics of aging in Canada, the spectrum of cognitive changes in older adults from normal aging through to advanced dementia, how multi-morbidity, polypharmacy, and frailty interact with cognition, and possible implications for legal practice. This on-demand program was originally presented as an in-person program titled Practice Foundations: Adult Guardianships and Trusteeships on May 28, 2024.  Total running time is 1 hour.

Papers

  • The Brain and Aging

    Canada’s population is aging, and issues of concern to older adults will have growing implications for medical and legal practice. This paper discusses the demographics of aging in Canada; explores the spectrum of cognitive changes in older adults from normal aging through to advanced dementia; introduces how multi-morbidity, polypharmacy, and frailty interact with cognition; and considers possible implications for legal practice. This paper is part of a collection presented at LESA’s Practice Foundations: Adult Guardianships and Trusteeships program in Edmonton on May 28, 2024.
  • The Brain and Aging

    Canada’s population is aging, which has growing implications for the medical and legal professions. This paper examines considerations for lawyers related to cognitive and functional decline in aging adults. In particular, the paper provides a description of the demographics of aging in Canada, an exploration of the spectrum of cognitive changes in older adults, a discussion of how multi-morbidity, polypharmacy, and frailty interact with cognition, and a review of possible implication for legal practice. This paper is part of a collection presented at LESA’s 2017 Understanding the Brain – What Lawyers Need to Know program.
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