Develop Nurses’ Clinical Skills to Enhance Care Clinical leaders can train nurses in various stages of growth through daily briefs and follow-through tutoring during resident assessments. Alexis Roam, RN-BC 8/1/2021 Caregiving Page ContentPerhaps now more than ever, nurses must utilize strong clinical assessment skills so that they can detect even the subtlest of changes and provide care that meets the needs of such a vulnerable population. Read more. Related News Management Caregiving Senior Living Trends for 2026 and Beyond Across the country, organizations are moving away from a “wait and see” approach and are instead acting on strategic initiatives that strengthen market position, modernize assets, and align communities with the preferences of a new generation of residents. READ MORE Caregiving Management Balancing Building Access with Safety and Security Senior living facilities need to blend residential comfort, medical readiness, hospitality, and security into a single integrated ecosystem designed around the well-being of older adults. READ MORE Diet Caregiving Setting Up Systems to Prevent Weight Loss Weight loss is rarely about one missed tray. It usually reflects breakdowns in workflow, observation, communication, and follow-through. If the interventions exist only on paper, resident decline will continue. READ MORE View All News Related Articles Caregiving 3/5/2026 Understanding the Long-Stay Antipsychotic Quality Measure The updated LS antipsychotic measure requires facilities to respond differently, not only by coding accurately, but also by managing medications more deliberately in real time. READ MORE Caregiving Management 3/5/2026 The Leader Behind the Numbers: Chris Wright “I look at it as a servant position. I’m not here to exert control. It’s about serving our members, and I’m focused on unifying a lot of priorities that we need to advocate for.” READ MORE Caregiving 3/5/2026 Respecting Our Melting Pot of Cultures Honoring residents’ cultural traditions through activities, food, and environment is an important part of successful person-centered care. Here’s how to get it right. READ MORE