Home Instead Senior Care, Burbank

Scrapbooking For Seniors

Friday, December 30, 2011

Along with reminiscing activities and other activities that get seniors talking about their lives, this is the perfect way to get them interested in something and to keep their minds sharp. Not only is this an idea that they can work on to have something special to do, it can also be something they can do with their family. This activity can be something that is an ongoing project that they work on in their own time by themselves, or when their friends and family are visiting. Each person visiting can contribute something to the scrapbook. Grandchildren can be especially helpful and encouraging when it comes to putting the              scrapbook pages together. 



Once or twice a month have a follow up activity where seniors discuss their scrapbooks to show and tell what they have done up to that point. During this activity, they can share ideas just like any other scrap-booking group does. When a scrapbook is completed,  offer them the chance to start another one if they would like to. 


This is a good activity to keep seniors motivated. It is also something that can encourage inter-generational contact.

Enter to Win a Family Reunion!

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Enter to Win a Family Reunion!

Gathering together to share and preserve family stories helps to keep the memories alive, especially for families touched by Alzheimer’s disease. What’s your family’s story? Tell us how Alzheimer’s has impacted your family, and how you cope with the challenges of the disease. You could win an unforgettable family reunion event funded by Home Instead Senior Care and valued at up to $10,000! See the prize details for specifics, and don’t forget to tell us why your family deserves to win this once-in-a-lifetime experience.

Click this link for more info: http://www.helpforalzheimersfamilies.com

7 Signs Santa Has Alzheimer's

Monday, December 12, 2011

Doctors know well that the holidays bring an upturn in families noticing worrisome signs of memory loss in older adults. No disrespect to Santa intended, but Jolly Old St. Nick also shows a worrisome number of not-so-jolly potential symptoms of dementia.
Only a doctor, of course, can diagnose Alzheimer's disease. But Mrs. Claus would do well to take a closer look at the following warning signs, which warrant a cognitive evaluation and medical exam in order to rule out other possible causes of dementia or -- though it seems impossible to imagine in                                                                                                 s                                                                 someone known for his ho, ho, ho -- depression.
1. Santa keeps making that list and checking it twice.
People with early memory loss are often aware that they're slipping, and they struggle to employ strategies to help them keep track. Writing notes to themselves is one way they do this. Eventually, though, the person with cognitive trouble forgets ever having written a list in the first place and then never consults it later.
Why does Santa check his list twice? Maybe he's just careful -- after all, it's a long list. But obsessively checking and rechecking a note or the clock -- often because you literally can't remember just having done so -- is a common sign of memory loss. The ability to record these new memories is impaired.
2. He wears the same clothes over and over.
Have you ever seen Santa wearing anything besides that fur-trimmed red suit? Wearing the same clothes repeatedly is another hallmark of advancing cognitive difficulty.
It's possible, of course, that the red suit is just Santa's chosen uniform, a la Steve Jobs -- but even Jobs ditched his signature black turtleneck and jeans for sleeping or sports. If Mrs. Claus has to sneak the suit out of the room at night in order to wash it every now and again, or if there are blue and yellow suits hanging in the closet that never get selected, she might consider this a red flag.
3. He needs a red-nosed reindeer to direct him on the same route he's driven for years.
You'd think Santa would know his worldwide sky routes like the back of his hand by now, instead of having to seek out a bright-nosed reindeer to lead the way.
But getting lost on familiar routes is often one of the earliest memory symptoms families notice. One classic clue: driving the same way for years but suddenly having moments of confusion during which he or she isn't certain of the location or destination. Both memory loss and "motion blindness" -- the ability to perceive motion well and navigate the environment -- are to blame.
If kids in Tokyo or Toledo wake up without any toys this Christmas, it just might be because Santa got lost in Tibet.
4. He's getting up there in years.
Alzheimer's disease isn't an inevitable side effect of aging. But the odds of developing it doincrease with age. As many as one in two people over age 85 have signs of dementia. And Santa is how old? Multiple centuries?
5. He asks the same questions over and over. ("What do you want for Christmas?" "Have you been a good little girl?")
Spend a few minutes with someone with mild dementia, and repetition -- of questions, comments, and even word-for-word long anecdotes -- is often apparent. The person may seem to get stuck on just a few phrases with certain people or in certain situations. Always asking a grandchild, "How's school?" or an adult child, "How's the family?" for example, are helpful crutches that the person with mild dementia may use to mask an underlying uncertainty.
Makes you wonder what Santa has ever said to a child around the globe besides, "What do you want for Christmas?" and "Have you been good?" You'd think he'd have plenty of stories and advice to share, but we just don't hear it.
6. He's obese.
The exact cause of Alzheimer's is unknown. But scientists have uncovered plenty of risk factors. High on the list: obesity. Santa's exact weight is unknown, but nobody looking at that bowl full of shaking jelly would place him inside the "normal" columns of the body-mass-index chart.
Belly fat (weight centered in the midsection) is clearly associated with an increased risk of Alzheimer's disease, especially when it accumulates in midlife. People who are obese also tend to develop diabetes and heart disease, which are themselves linked to a higher risk of dementia.
7. He's prone to mistaking the chimney for a door, and to calling musical instruments "rooty-toot-toots and rummy-tum-tums."
It's hard to understand why Santa chooses to use the chimney over the door, given that everyone's supposed to be asleep anyway and given how often he flops into fires and ashes. But cognitive difficulties often cause confusion in behavior and language.
Misusing words, a part of a general condition of language problems called aphasia, is another common development with dementia. Some people with dementia call a toothbrush a "mouth scraper" or a "thingamajig," for example. Songs about Santa refer to "rooty-toot-toots" and rummy-tum-tums" for musical instruments. Hmmm. . . .
Here's hoping those hardworking toymaker elves are also good at caregiving, since -- as far as we know -- Mr. and Mrs. Claus have no children of their own up at the Pole to step up to the demands of the job.


Brought to you by: Caring.com

I Will Remember For You - A Tribute

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Don't forget to sign up for "Home for the Holidays" FREE Web Conference will Help Family Caregivers

Friday, December 2, 2011

Home for the Holidays FREE Web Conference will Help Family Caregivers 

Going home for the holidays often leaves family members shocked at the declining health or independence of a loved one. Warning signs can help make decisions that will keep your senior safe long after you've returned home.
To learn more about these signs, register for theFREE Home for the Holidays web conference.
The web conference will help you recognize thewarning signs that indicate your senior loved one might need additional help for things such as loss of appetite, unwanted weight fluctuations, spoiled food in the fridge or clutter. Whether you're a long-distance caregiver or just live down the street, the holidays are a good time to assess the situation with Mom and Dad, and help them come up with a solution if necessary.
The web conference will be:
  • Moderated by a Home Instead Senior Care® representative
  • Hosted by the American Society on Aging (ASA)
  • Co-sponsored by the National Family Caregivers Association (NFCA) and the National Alliance for Caregiving (NAC).
The hour-long web conference will be offered on Eastern Time.

10 Signs that a Senior Might Need More Help at Home

  1. A change in appearance or condition of the home
  2. Clutter
  3. Dirty or unkempt clothing
  4. Unpaid bills
  5. Fresh food replaced with junk food
  6. Spoiled food in the fridge or freezer
  7. Bugs or rodents in the home
  8. Confusion
  9. Unfilled prescriptions
  10. Spills on floors and countertops

How to Convince the Alzheimer’s Patient to Shower, Change clothes and sometimes Brush Their Teeth

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

I was really baffled when Mom began to wear the same clothes day after day whether they were clean or not. Occasionally, I’d find her bundled up in a winter coat when it was 90 degrees. Once I arrived for a short trip to the grocery store and quick lunch at a fast-food restaurant and found Mom waiting in full make-up, long evening gown and dangling earrings.
Mom had been diagnosed with Alzheimers, but I had yet to do much reading or inform myself of the myriad of odd behaviors that came with that diagnosis. It was several weeks before I equated her new eccentricities to a decline in cognitive thinking. I didn’t understand the reason why she lost the ability to dress properly, or all interest in cleanliness until much later.
In the beginning it became a battle between us–me trying to convince Mom to change clothes or shower by sheer force.  If asked about it, she would only shrug, totally unconcerned by my beleaguered attempts to improve her hygiene. It was totally confusing to me. I was struggling to teach the very person who had taught me all I knew about living and learning and cleanliness.
Eventually,  in the middle stages of Alzheimers, Mom refused to shower at all. Our daily battles over the shower and hygiene became so stressful it still hurts to remember the angry words we spat at each other. Now, if I had it to do over, I don’t think I’d care if she ever showered again. It was many months before I learned that demanding and arguing only encourages the Alzheimer’s patient to become more obstinate and aggressive. Always “pick your battles” and remember, in light of the eventuality of  Alzheimer’s, almost anything is tolerable.
I still don’t know exactly why Alzheimer’s patients are so afraid of taking a shower, but I’ve seen it to be true with most of them. Many of the residents in the Group Home where mom eventually stayed were only brought to the shower after much encouraging and coaxing. I do think it’s some kind of  fear. Possibly, a fear of the water, the bathroom fixtures, the temperature settings. They do forget how to adjust the water temperature and I’ve often wondered if they’ve suffered a burn during that process.  Whatever the reason, you can read the fear in their eyes when you mention a shower.  Mom was terrified of the shower and if I left her to do it herself, she would disappear in the bathroom for long minutes, but exit without a drop of moisture in her hair.
Working on my “fear of the water temperature” theory, I found a solution that worked for us. I turned on the water in the shower,  adjusted the temperature, and let it run as I left the room. It wasn’t long before Mom was hunting me down. “You left water running in the bathroom,” she told me, “it will flood the floor.”
“Don’t you remember, Mom,” I said. “You told me to adjust the water because you wanted to take a shower. That’s what I did.”
Mom would only hesitate for a moment, search for a reply and then say, “Oh…I forgot I asked you to do that. Okay. I’ll take my shower now.” And  she was off to the bathroom and a shower as though it had been her idea all along.
  • The Alzheimer’s sufferer becomes expert at denying and covering for their memory lapses in the earliest stages of this disease.
  • They know how to make you feel crazy by denying their forgetting or pretending they remember while you know full-well they do not.
I must admit, though, I did marvel at how simple the resolution had been for the shower issue and wished I’d thought of it months earlier. It worked for a few months and that’s all I could ask.
For more information: Alzheimer's support

Drug Overdoses and the Elderly

Monday, November 28, 2011

Many of us are spending the Thanksgiving weekend with our parents or other elderly relatives and it's often a time when we begin to notice health issues that we might have overlooked when all our contact is on the phone.
A new study from the Centers for Disease Control points out one senior health problem that is especially easy to overlook: adverse drug reactions. According to a study by a CDC researcher that was published this week in the New England Journal of Medicine, nearly 100,000 adults 65 and over have an emergency hospital admission every year because of reactions to just a few commonly used drugs or classes of drugs.
The main problem drugs, the study says, are warfarin, insulins, antiplatelet agents and oral hypoglycemic agents.
None of these are classified as high-risk drugs; in fact, they are some of the most commonly prescribed medications for older people. Still, the study says that reactions to these drugs accounted for more than two-thirds of drug-related hospital admissions, often because of unintentional overdoses.
If you are caring for an elderly relative, you know that one of the big issues is making sure that your relative takes the right medication dose on the correct schedule. This can be a lot harder than it looks but the study shows that getting these common medications under control can be critical to improving an older person's health.

Holiday Shopping at Home is Both Easy & Risky for Elderly for Elderly Persons

Thursday, November 17, 2011

An elderly person can easily spend too much money on family Christmas gifts. Approved holiday credit can be costly for seniors on fixed or limited incomes.
Overspending on holiday gifts can be a costly mistake for elderly persons. Like so many consumers who shop online or by catalog, it's easy to get hooked into spending too much. Many catalog companies offer advanced credit lines to consumers with no payment due until the following year. "Buy-now-and-pay-later" is too tempting to pass up.
What's the problem? After the holidays have come and gone, payments from catalog accounts could last for months – even years – if the consumer pays only the minimum required amount at each billing. Should family members step in and set holiday spending limits for the elderly loved one who risks going deep into debt?

Elderly Persons Shop Online Without a Credit Card

It's easy to get caught up in the holiday spirit of giving – and overspending. What could be easier for an elderly person than shopping from the comfort of home? Credit makes buying easy, but credit cards aren't the only way to shop online or by catalog. A caregiver who helps an aging parent manage his finances may not have a clue there is any overspending going on until it's too late.

These days, one needs only a computer to access thousands of stores world-wide. Gifts, flowers and food items can be purchased on a buy-now-pay-later plan that requires no payment until after the holidays are over. As more and more gift companies extend approved credit limits to lure in new customers and keep old customers coming back, the temptation to buy grows harder to resist.

Approved credit with a buy-now-pay-later company means nothing is required to complete the transaction – not even a credit check if the purchaser is a repeat and valued customer. All that may be needed to order hundreds of dollars worth of merchandise is the account number the elderly person has on file with the company. The bills won't show up until after the holidays, in most cases.

Clues That an Elderly Person May be Shopping and Overspending

Since customer bills don't usually show up until a month or two later, it's not likely the elderly person will be suffering yet from any holiday debt he or she is creating. Ask the elder if he or she is shopping by catalog or online. A caregiver can also look around the home for signs that indicate holiday shopping may be in progress:

  • Holiday catalogs are piling up. Grandma won't let you throw them out.
  • Catalog order forms are filled out.
  • The aging parent speaks of Christmas presents without giving away specific information (or avoids the topic altogether when questioned).
  • The elder has received one or more "Thank you for your order" letters from gift companies.
  • You notice boxes (with or without company logos) discarded in the trash (also bubble wrap, tissue paper, Styrofoam or other wrapping materials).

Caution an Elderly Person About Holiday Spending

It may take a little persuading to get the grandparents or other elderly family member to listen and agree to a holiday gift-giving plan. Be prepared for resistance. Here are three suggestions for setting limits on holiday spending for elderly family members on a budget:
  1. Discuss with the elderly person a limit for purchasing holiday gifts. Tell Grandma or Grandpa that the family doesn't want to see anyone go into debt. Perhaps a family member can volunteer to help the elderly person keep track of holiday gift purchases and how much money is spent. This option will work if the grandparent agrees to cooperate and doesn't go online to fill out a catalog order without anyone knowing.
  2. Sit down with Grandma and tell her what each child would like that's within her budget. Be firm by adding that the children don't need a lot of presents or expensive gifts. If Grandma is given the option to buy a specific item from a specific place, then she stands a better chance of staying within budget. If she resists, stand your ground as a parent.
  3. Hold a family conference. With other adult family members in agreement, announce to the grandparents (or other family seniors) that they should spend no more than what they can comfortably afford. If the grandparents are stubbornly persistent, then explain to them in a nice way that other family members are not in the financial position to help out should overspending occur. This might sound a little harsh, but it beats having to pay off all those account balances after Christmas.
There is no sure-fire way to stop a competent elderly person from shopping – or spending too much money during the holidays. Setting limits is reasonable solution to holiday overspending if everyone in the family agrees and cooperates. A family member caregiver who helps the elder manage financial matters can try to set limits early and prevent elderly holiday overspending before it happens.

Paying off all those holiday bills can be tough for the elderly person who lives on a modest income. The Internet and the lure of easy payment plans is all an elderly person needs to fall into the trap of serious debt. There are ways a caregiver can tactfully limit an elderly loved one's holiday spending without being labeled a scrooge. Once the grandparents realize the family is being realistic and wants what's best for everyone, they might warm up to the idea. Better yet, they might even feel relieved at having little or no holiday debt to worry about.



Read more at Suite101: Holiday Shopping at Home is Both Easy & Risky for Elderly Persons | Suite101.com http://maryking.suite101.com/holiday-shopping-at-home-is-both-easy--risky-for-elderly-persons-a310162#ixzz1e0LJ0kFf

Upcoming Educational Opportunities | Caregiver Stress

Monday, November 14, 2011

Home for the Holidays FREE Web Conference will Help Family Caregivers

Going home for the holidays often leaves family members shocked at the declining health or independence of a loved one. Warning signs can help make decisions that will keep your senior safe long after you've returned home.

To learn more about these signs, register for the FREE Home for the Holidays web conference.

The web conference will help you recognize the warning signs that indicate your senior loved one might need additional help for things such as loss of appetite, unwanted weight fluctuations, spoiled food in the fridge or clutter. Whether you're a long-distance caregiver or just live down the street, the holidays are a good time to assess the situation with Mom and Dad, and help them come up with a solution if necessary.

The web conference will be:

  • Moderated by a Home Instead Senior Care® representative

  • Hosted by the American Society on Aging (ASA)

  • Co-sponsored by the National Family Caregivers Association (NFCA) and the National Alliance for Caregiving (NAC).

The hour-long web conference will be offered on two dates and times:

Get more information and pre-register for the November 15th web conference

Get more information and pre-register for the December 5th web conference

10 Signs that a Senior Might Need More Help at Home

  1. A change in appearance or condition of the home
  2. Clutter
  3. Dirty or unkempt clothing
  4. Unpaid bills
  5. Fresh food replaced with junk food
  6. Spoiled food in the fridge or freezer
  7. Bugs or rodents in the home
  8. Confusion
  9. Unfilled prescriptions
  10. Spills on floors and countertops



















Upcoming Educational Opportunities | Caregiver Stress