She lives in a world in which each moment is starting over - The 36-Hour Day

Peter V. Rabins, MD, MPH is regarded by the medical profession as a national leader in the care of Alzheimer’s patients.

He has contributed to numerous Video Press productions for staff training in long-term care, assisted living communities, Alzheimer’s support groups and for family caregivers.

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About Peter V. Rabins, MD, MPH

Expertise and Credentials

Doctor Peter V. RabinsEducation
Dr. Rabins received a BA in Political Science from the University of Florida in 1969, an MD from Tulane University in 1973 and an MPH from Tulane University School of Public Health in 1974.

After a psychiatry residence at the University of Oregon, he completed a one-year fellowship in consultation/liaison and neuropsychiatry at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and has been on the faculty there since 1978.

Dr. Rabins is the Director of the Division of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neuropsychiatry in the Department of Psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.

He is currently Professor and Vice-Chair for Academic Affairs in the Department of  Psychiatry and has joint appointments in the Departments of Medicine Health Policy & Management and Mental Health.

Areas of Interest
Dr. Rabins has focused his career on the study of psychiatric disorders in older persons. His current research focuses on the effectiveness of current therapies for Alzheimer's disease, the development of measures of quality of life in persons with Alzheimer's disease and care of patients with late stage dementia.

Publications
Co-author of The 36-Hour Day (1981, 1991, 1999, 2006), Practical Dementia Care (2000) and Getting Old Without Getting Anxious (2005). Dr. Rabins is also the author of more than 180 articles and book chapters.

For more information on Dr. Rabins visit his Johns Hopkins Medicine Faculty web page at:
www.hopkinsmedicine.org

Editorial Reviews

The 36-Hour Day
by Nancy L. Mace and Peter V. Rabins

"An excellent book for families who are caring for persons with dementia... A book that physicians can confidently recommend to the families of their patients."
--Journal of the American Medical Association

"The best guide of its kind."
--Chicago Sun-Times

"Excellent guidance and clear information of a kind that the family needs... The authors offer the realistic advice that sometimes it is better to concede the patient's frailties than to try to do something about them, and that a compassionate sense of humor often helps."
--New York Times