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Caregivers News


Information by and for senior caregivers.  Sometimes just knowing someone else has
been through the same kinds of things helps.


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Senior Care for Your Parents Print E-mail
Written by A Mother's Daughter   
Tuesday, 29 March 2011 02:51

There comes a time for many of boomer women when they have to face the inevitability of finding care for their aging parents, or even for themselves. About ten years ago my mother needed senior housing and I’ve learned an awful lot about senior care since then.

My father had passed away years before so my five siblings and I talked our mom into moving into a retirement facility. We felt that our fiercely independent mother (an RN with five WWII battle stars) could manage in senior living much better than she could in her apartment. My mother, independent or not, was happy for some help at that point, and agreed.

Senior Housing

Senior housing is different in different places, but, for the most part, it involves apartments or condos that offer some sort of a meal package, a place for residents to park their cars – and many have cars – and accommodations for older people. The bathrooms have handrails in the bathtubs and there are often emergency call pulls in each room. Each apartment or condo has its own bedroom and kitchen. The cost of such living depends on whether it’s low income housing, which it was in my mother’s case it was, or housing for more affluent seniors. There’s limited “supervision” and everyone comes and goes as they please. However, everyone tends to look after everyone else a little bit, too. Often residents only need to be 55 to enter senior living housing.

Then one day I got the call that my mother was in the hospital. Her diabetes had become increasing difficult to control and we had been worried about it. The night before, she had tripped when she got out of bed to make a trip to the bathroom and had ended up lying on the floor all night – cold and semiconscious as her blood sugar levels plummeted. In the morning her calls alerted a security guard who called an ambulance.

 

Assisted Living

So, what next? My mom was in the hospital for a week where she was poked, prodded and stabilized. She was deemed no longer able to take care of herself in senior living. The next step was assisted care.

Lucky for my sister and me, the hospital had a very competent and compassionate social worker who set us up with a local assisted living center.

Assisted living can either be a one building setup where residents have their own room, or share a room with another resident, and take all their meals in a common dining room, or apartments similar to senior housing where more nursing care is available. Residents in senior living don’t need skilled nursing or complex medical services but they can no longer live on their own without supervision. Besides meals, residents get help with bathing and dressing, and, of course, they no longer have any housekeeping chores. In many states assisted living staff can also administer medication. This was good for my mother who was on several different medications at the time.

The type of assisted living, again, depends on how much your parent can afford and what’s available in the locale that you and and your parent are considering for a new home.

Skilled Nursing Care

The day may come when assisted living is no longer enough care for your parent. My mother, now 91, recently became a resident of a state veteran’s home.

To live in assisted care she had to be able to walk and not be confined to a wheelchair. It appeared, that due to a back injury years before, her walking was becoming increasingly unsteady and she began falling.

For my mother, a veteran living on a limited income, the best option was a veteran’s home. She would also have been eligible for this care if she was the wife or widow of a veteran (which she is.) The veteran’s home in this area is lovely and offers extraordinary care.

My mom has her own room and 24/7 medical care – everything from physical therapy to a special diet while her dentures are being repaired.

In a skilled nursing facility residents receive constant nursing care and have significant deficiencies of one sort or another that make them unable to live in their own homes, or facilities where lesser care is offered. It’s one step down from hospital care.

So this is where we are now. As I said, I’ve learned a lot about dealing with a parent in all sorts of assisted living so I’ll be glad to share some more information in the next article.

 


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Last Updated on Friday, 30 September 2011 08:56
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A New Strategy to Meet the Needs of the Elderly Print E-mail
Written by Editor   
Friday, 21 January 2011 00:00

Information that might be of particular interest to our caregiver community...

 


 

A New Strategy to Meet the Needs of the Elderly   by Alan Lipton


Geriatric Care Management:

Getting older isn't what it used to be. There was a time when senior members of the community lived amongst their extended family, relying on their children or grandchildren for support. But as the Baby Boomer generation pushes the population's media age higher and higher, and as each generation seems to move ****her and ****her from its geographical roots, the act of younger generations caring for their elderly relatives is becoming less common. Nowadays, the elderly must find alternative ways to receive the type of care they need, though many seniors are reluctant to move into retirement homes or assisted living facilities.

 


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Last Updated on Tuesday, 25 January 2011 08:09
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Focusing on Golden Years with Dignified Care Print E-mail
Written by Gardner Wilkinson   
Sunday, 26 December 2010 00:00

Author: Gardner Wilkinson

Many people feel once they retire they will be able to enjoy their life. As age catches up, so do ailments unfortunately. There are many older people who are now under Senior Care programs. Some are under adult home care, Adult Day Care depending on their individual needs. The golden years can bring about uncertainty about daily activities that were once taken for granted. Home care prevents the elderly patients from going away to a commercial institution such as a group home or nursing facility. If such person is in need of or senior care around the home, a home care aide or caregiver can be brought in to help the patient live independently.


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Last Updated on Sunday, 26 December 2010 21:21
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My Mother Did What? Print E-mail
Written by Steve B.   
Thursday, 04 November 2010 00:00

My sister and I have been trying to help our parents age with dignity and to maintain as much independence as possible. During this endeavor of many years my mother has been diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease and my father with acute arthritis and a long standing heart condition. Although they are not destitute, they are of modest means so we have tried to make the right decisions the first time around to help minimize expenditures. 

My in-laws are somewhat younger by 10 or 12 years, and although my mother-in-law is in good shape (she has had knee replacement surgery on both legs) my father-in-law has been dealing with diabetes for quite some time. For the last 3 years he has been on dialysis and late last year he was able to have a double transplant. He was doing quite well at first but then a number of complications set in and he ended up having a leg am****ted.

In the meantime we lost a number of uncles, our family dog of 15 years passed on, and my young children had some difficulty dealing with all of this death, disease and hospitalization. Then to add to my stress, the company I worked for was purchased by a large health care organization and all the employees were laid off despite their assurances that “everyone will have an opportunity to have a job”. (I guess they forgot to mention that the job wouldn’t be with them!)


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Last Updated on Friday, 05 November 2010 14:02
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Nursing Home Abuse Lawyers & Attorneys Print E-mail
Written by Editor   
Thursday, 28 May 2009 19:00

   by T.Going

With more and more of the United States population aging, nursing home and elderly communities are constantly expanding to help accommodate more patients. Tragically however, nursing home abuse of the elderly is becoming one of the most widespread crimes in America. Nursing home patients are vulnerable from many types of abuse ranging from physical violence to theft of property.

Many common types of nursing home abuse cases have been caused by under qualified and inexperienced staff members. Employees are sometimes unable to handle certain situations and have been known to take out their frustrations on residents of the nursing homes. Studies show that over half of the suspicious deaths researched in nursing homes might have been causes by neglect or negligence including dehydration and malnutrition.

Because of conditions such as dementia and Alzheimer's, older adults are very vulnerable to abuse. History of domestic violence may also make certain seniors more susceptible to abuse in a nursing home.

 


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Last Updated on Tuesday, 07 September 2010 09:04
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