Archive for December, 2006

Posted on Dec 21st, 2006

Board and Care homes (also known as RCFE’s - Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly) are residential private homes that have been licensed by the Department of Social Services to provide services to seniors. Most accept no more than six residents, but offer a cozy, home-like setting for frail seniors. At least one caregiver is on the premises at all times to assist residents.

Board and care homes come with a variety of characteristics. Rooms can be shared or private and may include a shared or private bathroom. Limited social activities are provided, but not to the extent of an assisted living facility. Specific needs can be met in this small setting, such as language, ethnic or food preferences, even accommodating a loved pet. Meals, laundry, housekeeping, transportation to doctor appointments are usually included. Most provide assistance with dressing, bathing, grooming, eating, medication management, and hygiene and continence issues. With hundreds of these homes scattered throughout most geographic areas, there is hardly a situation that cannot be met in a board and care home.

With most board and care homes, a resident will interact with just three or four caregivers each week. This allows caregivers and residents to form a close bond, which many seniors prefer. Homes range in care giving levels, from simply providing a personal presence for seniors to dealing with severe medical conditions. If fact, some specialize in very specific areas of healthcare and their related needs, such as non-ambulatory residents, stroke or paralysis residents, diabetes care, oxygen needs, catheters, colostomy’s, and cognitive and memory impairments such as dementia, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease. Some medical conditions such as a feeding tubes or tracheotomies cannot be handled by board and care homes.

Generally, Board and Care homes are managed and owned by an individual or family who are closely involved in the day-to-day activities of the home. Board and care homes are a refreshing alternative to the more business like approach of an assisted living or skilled nursing facility.

Alex Jensen is with http://www.careplacement.com - a free placement service for Southern California. Care Placement’s staff can review your care requirements to determine whether skilled nursing care, assisted living facilities or board and care homes are a viable option for seniors.

Posted on Dec 20th, 2006

Assisted Living facilities are generally for person’s 60 years of age and older. Typical candidates need assistance with “Activities of Daily Living” (ADLs), but wish to live as independently as possible. Assisted Living communities exist to bridge the gap between seniors that can live independently and skilled nursing homes.

Assisted living facilities provide helpful services such as:

1. Eating,

2. Bathing,

3. Dressing,

4. Grooming,

5. Laundry,

6. Housekeeping,

7. Assistance with medications.

While Board and Care facilities are usually in a private residential home, Assisted Living facilities are larger structures often arranged as senior living communities. These communities can contain as many as 400 residents or as few as 25 seniors. Residents of assisted living communities usually meet in a dining room together with other residents for meals.

A person designated as the ‘Activities Director’ oversees a key area in the assisted living community - Social activities. The Activities Director typically arranges daily options for residents including outings, crafts, dances, music, educational classes, seminars, and other opportunities. All activities are designed to encourage physical and mental stimulation.

Assisted Living facilities create a care plan for each individual resident upon admission. The care plan details the agreed upon personalized services required by the resident and guaranteed to be provided by the facility. The plan is updated regularly to assure that the resident receives the appropriate care as his or her condition changes.

Assisted Living communities are closely involved in the health needs of their residents. They often have a person designated to oversee this called a ‘Health Care Director’. They coordinate the monitoring of health related issues involving medication, diet, personal hygiene, socialization and mental acuity to assist the senior and their family as they interact with health care professionals. If a decline is noted in a specific area, family and health care professionals are consulted by the Health Care Director to resolve issues. Often, because of their experience, unexpected emergency health issues are avoided, as signs of a decline recognized and acted upon early.

Residents can live at ‘Assisted Living’ communities for many years, even as their health declines considerably. Many offer hospice care and end of life assistance. If you are considering senior care options, assisted living facilities are definitely an option worth looking into.

Alex Jensen is with http://www.careplacement.com - a free placement service for Southern California. Care Placement’s staff can review your care requirements to determine whether skilled nursing care, assisted living facilities or board and care homes are a viable option for seniors.

Posted on Dec 19th, 2006

The decision to place your loved one into a nursing home is an extremely difficult decision, often causing much guilt for the caregiver. It is a very emotional decision for most clients we see and most are under a certain amount of stress, often great, when facing what they consider to be a drastic course of action.

I counsel our caregiver clients to get beyond the guilt as quickly as they can, because the situation their loved one is in is not the caregiver’s fault. And besides, the longer you remain under this stress, the less healthy you eat, or you eat way too much, the less you sleep, and some start drinking (my own mother started this late at night after she got my dad settled in bed for the evening – not healthy to say the least).

The stress of caring for a loved one is constant and unrelenting. It is a physical, mental and emotional grind. On numerous occasions, we have actually had caregiver clients die before the spouse in the nursing home. Sometimes, the caregivers die shortly after the nursing home spouse dies. The stress of being a caregiver can be deadly serious, especially for older clients who are caregivers for their spouse.

You have to recognize it and develop a plan to deal with it.

Get your children involved in developing a plan to deal with your loved one’s incapacity. And remember, plan for the absolute worst case scenario. Get to an attorney who can help you develop a plan to help you with your particular situation. And this is especially important as soon as you detect any signs of dementia in your parent or spouse, or as soon as you begin to detect physical problems with your loved one. The sooner you begin the plan, the better off the family will be.

NOW, HOW DO WE PAY FOR MAMA’S NURSING HOME CARE? There are really only three ways to pay for a stay in a nursing home.

LONG TERM CARE INSURANCE (LTCI). If Mama was far-sighted enough, she may have purchased LTCI in the past before she needed it. This would be an excellent source of funds to help defray some or all of Mama’s long term care costs. Unfortunately, very few seniors, those over age 60, have LTCI coverage.

SELF PAY. This essentially means that Mama has enough income or financial assets to pay her own way in the nursing home. However, many families don’t have the income or the financial asset base to be able to pay $4,000 to $7,500 or more a month for a bed for very long in a nursing home.

MEDICAID. This is a state-administered medical benefit program which will pay for the cost of a nursing home stay if three tests are met, i.e., medical need, asset, and income. Medicaid is obviously a needs-based program, funded partially by state funds, but mostly by federal funds. Many people are under the mistaken impression that MEDICARE, which most seniors in this country over age sixty-five participate in to one degree or another, will cover the cost of their stay in a nursing home.

(c) Copyright 2005 P.L.Fields LLC

P.L. Fields is a Medicaid Expert and President of Senior Strategies, a service that helps seniors save time and money. To learn more about the secret strategies and solutions that Medicaid lawyers charge to get clients qualified for Medicaid, while protecting their assets, visit: http://www.medicaidsecrets.info

Posted on Dec 18th, 2006

Every year, as Christmas approaches, you hear Christmas carols everywhere. Sometimes to the point where another Silent Night would make you want to silent the sound system.

Everyone is scrambling to buy Christmas gifts for everyone in a list that seems miles long. The queues to pay up and the queues for a parking lot seem endlessly long too.

Christmas cards are sent out to friends and family, some of whom you might not have seen for years.

Beautifully decorated christmas trees pop up every where. Buildings are dressed in lights, mistletoes, bells, and other Christmas decorations. Santa Claus, his elves and reindeer are seen every where. Kids get more and more excited as Christmas approach. Even grown ups prepare for the onslaught of Christmas partying during that time of the year. Party dresses are purchased. Everyone gets ready to dress to their nines.

In all this excitement, do you know what you are celebrating?

What is Christmas actually? It sometimes seems like a brillian invention of the toy makers to push sales of toys to all the parents around the world. A sales marketing ploy of the retail industry.

Actually, Christmas is the celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ. Long ago, a little baby was born to a girl who was still a virgin. The baby was born in a manger, among the animals, yet angels proclaimed his birth. Wise men followed a star that marked his birth and presented him with precious gifts, to pay homage to him. It all seemed so beautifully sweet.. until you realise the reason why this child was born.

This baby was born to die. To be crucified on the cross while still in his prime. Killed alongside murderers, on the insistence of the crowds, even though he had not committed a crime… days after being welcomed into Jerusalem by crowds of people waving palm leaves, shouting Hosanna, praising him.

It was a gruesome death. He was whipped and then his body, all covered with blood, still a live, was nailed to a cross and left to die. Upon his death, the skies turned dark. There was an earthquake The curtain separating the holiest place in the temple in Jerusalem from the rest of the area was torn in two.

3 days later, his tomb was empty and the heavy stone was rolled away. His disciples and those close to him saw him. He spent time with them, ate with them, showing he was alive and not a ghost. Later, while talking to a crowd of people, he rose up in the sky disappeared into the clouds.

All this happened for a reason.

The first man and women, Adam and Eve disobeyed God. That was the first sin. From then on, every one of us sins. A tiny white lie, doing what we know we shouldn’t do… The penalty for sin is death. The only one who did not sin is Jesus. Jesus is the Son of God. Mary was a virgin when she conceived Jesus. Jesus had to die on the cross to win forgiveness for anyone who chooses to accept his gift. The real Christmas gift.

Sounds far fetched? That’s why they are called miracles. Miracles are still happening today. All over the world. Check out Lighthouse which has miracle services every Saturday. You can read the pastor’s latest sermon each week there too.

A good resource that explains every detail of the Christmas story is http://www.answersingenesis.org/ Actually, that site explains the creation vs evolution theories, dinosaurs and a lot more.

So the next time the pressures of Christmas preparations drive you up the wall and you wish you could kill the person who invented Christmas, don’t worry. You already have.

The writer is the webmaster of Christmas giftshop.

Posted on Dec 17th, 2006

Finding the best nursing home is easier than you might think. That is assuming there is more than one nursing home in your area so that you have something to compare. The sad part is that the best nursing home is just the one that meets your expectations better than its competitors. That doesn’t mean it is a good nursing home, it might even mean that it just isn’t the worst.

A good source of information and feedback on local nursing homes is the attending physician for the residents. The staff at the physician’ office works closely with the nursing home staff scheduling appointments and transportation, prescribing medication, and treating ailments as well as serious medical conditions. We found the best nursing home for my grandfather from the recommendation of our cardiologist’s nurse.

One of the most valuable tools to compare nursing homes is a nursing home report you can get through Check My Nursing Home.com. This report will tell you about complaints against the nursing home, inspections of the nursing home, abuse and neglect cases, and other valuable feedback that potential residents need to be aware of.

This report is definitely a necessity, but the most valuable tool to compare nursing homes is personal interviews with residents, staff members, and family members. Remember when talking to residents and caregivers that we all compare things based on our own perceptions. For example, my grandfather is getting excellent care and unbelievable attention at his nursing home, but thinks he is being abused and neglected because the food is so bad.

Find out what the employees like and don’t like about their working environment and employer. The attitude and contentment of the staff will have a direct affect on the care and attention your loved one will receive. Compare nursing homes based on how good of an environment it is for nurses to work in, and you’ll get a clearer picture of how good of an environment it is for residents to live in. Ask questions like, "How often do you have to do someone else’s work that is not your job?" You’ll learn a lot about how work is managed, but most importantly, you’ll get a clearer picture of the attitude of the person you are interviewing. Do they have a resentful attitude or a cooperative one? Do they mind helping outside of their job descriptions, or do they see the staff as a team where everyone works together no matter what the task? These keys will give you a good indication of what is going to happen when your loved one needs help going to the potty when the nurse’s aide assigned to their room is busy with another resident.

Always ask specific questions to compare programs and care, such as "Tell me about your physical therapy routine, what exercises you do, and how often?" Asking, "How’s physical therapy here?" will only provide you with personal opinion. And even if the therapy is excellent—if the resident doesn’t like the PT nurse, you’re liable to get a negative response. My grandfather hates the resistance bands his physical therapist uses, and really feels stupid sitting there stretching rubber bands. If you asked him what he thought about physical therapy at his nursing home, you are going to get an earful of how it’s a useless waste of time. But if you specifically ask him what his physical therapy routine consists of and how often he has physical therapy, you’ll get some facts mixed in with the soap box venting.

So to compare nursing homes, visit them personally, ask lots of questions, and interview not only staff, but residents and their families as well. Once you have your choices narrowed down to one or two, order a report on the home to check out what is really happening behind the scenes. And once you’ve chosen the best nursing home, keep checking on them to make sure the care your loved one receives continues to meet your expectations and their needs.

Shannon Davis is a consumer advocate and freelance writer for the health care, nursing home, and long term care industry. What does Shannon have to say about your local nursing home? Visit http://www.checkmynursinghome.com

Posted on Dec 16th, 2006

As a person ages, a certain amount of memory loss and confusion is quite normal. Personally, I’ve been known to invoke the cliché, “The older I get, the better I was!” Unfortunately, Alzheimer’s disease represents a more serious loss of mental sharpness and calls for special care for seniors.

Alzheimer’s Disease

Alzheimer’s Disease is a progressive form of pre-senile dementia. Symptoms are typically first noted in a person’s late forties or early fifties. As the disease takes effect, it will first impact memory. Impaired thought and speech will follow with the patient eventually becoming helpless.

Alzheimer’s is a truly horrible disease because it robs a person of their ability to function. The disease is also damaging to family and friends as it is very difficult to watch a parent, brother, sister or friend progress to the point where they don’t recognize anyone. The burden of caring for a person suffering from Alzheimer’s is significant. At some point in time, a family will have to look for assistance with the care.

Most “board and care” and “assisted living facilities” are willing and capable of providing for a person suffering from Alzheimer’s. These facilities are similar to nursing homes, but with less of an institutional atmosphere. If, however, a senior becomes increasingly disoriented, perhaps even occasionally wandering away, they may require a facility with a dementia waiver.

Despite the name, a “dementia waiver” is an indication that a facility and staff have additional training and licensing for the care of patients with dementia. On top of the additional training, the actual facility may be secured with a perimeter to keep patients on the grounds.

Alzheimer’s disease leaves a mark on family and friends as well as the victim. There are, however, facility options that can at least take the care burden off of you.

Alex Jensen is with http://www.careplacement.com - a free placement service for seniors in need of assisted living, board and care or skilled nursing facilities in San Diego and Southern California.

Posted on Dec 15th, 2006

Several months ago, I was coming out of a gas station when a woman stopped me and asked me what I did for a living. On the back of our van is our web address. On the side wing windows is "Free Senior Home Placement." I explained to her that I am a Long Term Care Consultant. She breathed a sigh of relief. "Great I need you!"

She went on to explain that her mother had fallen and was in the hospital. Her hip had been broken, and she was going to be discharged from the hospital in two days. She was going to require 24-hour care. To complicate matters her mother had been caring for her father who was unable to walk, or feed himself. Suddenly they found themselves in the middle of a crisis.

Families never expect to be in a situation like this. But situations like this happen all of the time. Here is a list of things families should do to be prepared for a crisis.

While your parents are still mentally cognizant discuss with them the kind of long-term options they would prefer. Discuss, nursing homes, assisted living facilities, adult family homes, boarding homes, or in-home care.

Prepare a notebook that includes documentation, such as physicians phone numbers, attorney’s phone numbers, bank account information, ministers phone number, power of attorney documents, and their living will.

Educate yourself on the kinds of facilities that are available in your area, or where your parents live.

Contact your local department of social and health services, find out what resources that they have available if you should need financial support. Fill out the paperwork ahead of time, leaving the date and other time sensitive information blank.

Discuss some of these issues with your siblings before hand, so you do not have to deal with family dynamics in a crisis.

Visit facilities and discuss prices so you know what your parents are able to afford. (Note that when the time comes circumstances may be that they cannot live in the kind of facility that they would prefer, especially if they require heavier care than they had anticipated.)

Being unprepared when a crisis hits will leave you scrambling. If you have done a portion of the legwork before hand you can face the crisis before you with a measure of confidence. ~Dutchy

Renee "Dutchy" Reeves is an Elder Care Consultant with over 10 years of working with the elderly and their families. Her online advice column, "Ask Dutchy" provides practical ideas and advice for assisting the elderly with Alzheimer’s disease, Dementia, Parkinson’s, disability, and those needing long term care. See other articles by her at http://www.askdutchy.mycarelink.net

Posted on Dec 14th, 2006

If you’re 60 to 70 years old … or have a family member who is … then what you are about to discover could help prevent the complete erosion of your estate.

In fact, it’s probably the most important asset you could ever own. Let me explain why.

For over 24 years, I have helped hundreds of individuals understand and implement money saving ideas. From the birth of an innocent newborn to the demise of a crafty senior I’ve witnessed families in every financial situation imaginable.

As my clients age (and me along with them), I can tell you without hesitation the biggest fear of growing old is losing your ability to remain independent.

Although we are living longer, we are not necessarily living better.

Chronic disease is rampant … and it strikes with a vengeance when you least expect it.

How many people who have experienced a stroke knew it was going to happen to them?

How many anticipated that particular moment when they began to forget things?

The facts speak for themselves. Literally millions of Americans require long term care … either in nursing homes, day care centers, assisted living facilities or in their own homes.

And the cost of providing this care is outrageous with no end in sight.

Now, if you think it will never happen to you … I’m sorry. This article doesn’t try to convince anyone about the likelihood of their needing care before they die.

It’s meant for those who understand and appreciate the need to arm themselves with protection against the horrific expense of long term care.

In fact, this article is ideal for those who have already looked at traditional types of long term care policies and are trying to determine which type is best for them.

One of the biggest objections to buying a long term care policy is that if the benefit is never needed the premiums paid for the policy will be wasted.

This is somewhat like buying automobile insurance. You have to pay the premium in order to get your car repaired. But what if you never have an accident. Is that considered losing your premium?

Funny isn’t it? People hardly question paying for car insurance, but they frequently resist doing so for a long term care policy.

So… what if you could always get your premium back - guaranteed - if you never require any long term care?

And, what if you die before receiving long term care? Wouldn’t it be great if your loved ones could recover 100% of your premium expense?

How about this? You actually use up all of your long term care benefit. And then you die. What if your family could still get back 10 percent of your premium.

Now if you know anything about long term care policies you’re probably wondering why you haven’t heard of this type before.

One reason is because it is non-traditional and not included in the mainstream marketing of long term care policies.

Another is because it takes a large sum of money to buy the policy. $50,000 is typical and it’s a one-time single premium, which means you will never get stuck with a premium increase.

It is not uncommon for people between 60 and 70 to have large sums of money stashed away in bank CDs earning low interest. Kind of an emergency fund.

Transferring a portion of this fund into the policy makes sense because the money continues to earn interest. Besides, it usually pays more than the bank … plus, the policy interest is tax deferred.

It’s also common for people this age to have old life insurance policies with significant cash value.

Many times it’s possible to transfer the cash into the long term care policy and still retain a meaningful death benefit.

And the future long term care benefit could easily be worth over one million dollars.

This policy has a 90 day waiting period before benefits are paid. The length of the benefit can be as short as 4 years or as long as your lifetime. You can also get a 5% compound interest inflation protection rider to help keep up with the rising cost of care.

The name of this policy is MoneyGuard. It is a universal life insurance policy with a long term care rider. The issuing life insurance company is Lincoln Life, a subsidiary of Lincoln Financial Group.

By the way, this policy was initially developed by Penn-Pacific Life many years ago. They have years of experience and an excellent reputation. Lincoln recently bought Penn-Pacific.

Ask your life insurance agent to get you more information about this single premium policy. For the right situation it is absolutely the best guarantee in a long term care policy.

Don Adams is a 24 year veteran financial consultant who has helped hundreds of individuals solve a variety of problems related to money matters. More information is available at http://personal-finance-on-the-net.com

Posted on Dec 13th, 2006

The give and take of good conversation is a joy. We can be introduced to a total stranger and develop a friendship within minutes if the conversation is open and honest. The friendships formed through the writing of this book were cemented before we ever met each other merely through the process of the writing and with communication that doesn’t require a face to face encounter. When your loved one becomes ill with a disease such as Alzheimer’s, one of the first things you may notice is a change in his or her ability to communicate.

In the earliest stages of Alzheimer’s disease you may notice afflicted people searching for the right word. The halting speech pattern and word searching may not raise a red flag at first. Everyone has occasionally forgotten the word they are looking for or lost a train of thought. This is frustrating when it happens to us. We know what we want to say but can’t get to it. It is even more frustrating when this becomes an ever-increasing occurrence and an indication of more than a fleeting problem.

You may hear people with relatively early Alzheimer’s say things such as, “I needed to go to the….oh, you know….the place where I buy food.” The word “store” has slipped from their minds and trying to retrieve it may become too much for them, so they give you hints like “the place where I buy food.” This kind of halting communication may seem tiresome, but if you remember that even this form of communication will eventually become very rare you will learn to cherish these conversations. Early in the disease, it is words that are used infrequently that are lost, as are the names of people who are seen or talked about only occasionally. As time progresses, commonly used words and the names of people closest to the individual will also be lost.

One way that the Alzheimer’s patient tries to cope with this lack of word finding is to cover. Covering is a term to describe the means people find to keep others unaware of their difficulties with speaking and remembering. Others may try to isolate themselves in order to avoid the challenge of communicating once they realize there is a problem. Some people laugh off an incident as a temporary aberrance, even though the person may be aware that it is happening more and more frequently. Another way in which a person may try to cover for memory lapses is to call friends and family members by a generic term such as “pal” or “sweetie,” or some other term of endearment. If this generic naming gives them a sense of comfort then let it be. The biggest mistake you can make is to put them on the spot by quizzing them on names and facts. Below are some other communication hints and techniques: Look the individual in the eye when speaking to her.

Remember that people with Alzheimer’s are very sensitive to your nonverbal communications and may become agitated if you show irritation, anger, frustration, and similar emotions. Keep your voice warm, calm, and friendly.

Keep it simple. Avoid complex sentences and complex grammatical structure. For example: DON’T ASK: “Would you like to wear your blue sweater or your green sweater?” DO ASK: “Would you like to wear your blue sweater?” If the individual says no, offer the green sweater in a separate question.

When possible, avoid even asking the question and just make a simple statement. “Here is your blue sweater.” When dealing with something that the person dislikes, such as dressing if this is an issue for your loved one, do not offer options just make a simple statement. “Time to get dressed.”

Always remember to speak to the person respectfully. No one likes to be condescended to, including people with Alzheimer’s disease. Cover only one topic at a time. Talking about more than one subject is too confusing and will leave the person with Alzheimer’s confused. Be very specific when you talk. Avoid using nondistinct words, including pronouns. For example: “They’re going to the beach,” is too confusing. “Susan and Fred are going to the beach” is more likely to be understood.

Pick your times to discuss important issues. Usually early in the day is best for a person with Alzheimer’s disease. Do not discuss important issues when the individual is tired, which is usually later in the day. Patience. Give the person time when he is trying to express himself. Do not rush to finish his sentences or guess at the word he is trying to find. Do not brush off an unfinished thought and move on to something else. Give the person time to put the words together if he can. You will look back on these times of stammering speech with longing, so don’t be too impatient to move ahead too fast.

Do not put the person with Alzheimer’s on the spot. Do not, for example, say “Do you remember when we….” Instead, help jog the person’s memory: “I remember when we….”

In later stages when communication may be nonexistent, keep talking to the person even if she cannot talk back. And a warm smile and loving touch do as much or more to communicate love as verbal communications.

As people begin to lose the ability to express themselves you may find them becoming depressed. Something is wrong with their minds and they may be noticing it, now they have the added problem of not being able to explain what they are thinking or feeling. As a psychological defense they may be angry or accuse you of not listening. They may deny having been told things that they cannot remember. If you are not aware of their illness these accusations and their anger can seem to come out of the blue. Do not argue these issues – doing so will only frustrate and embarrass the individual. Let it go and, if it helps, blame yourself rather than the person with Alzheimer’s: “Maybe I forgot to tell you. I’m sorry.” It is far more important to consider the psychological well-being of the person at these times than to argue the little issues. Above all it is important that you try to keep your frustration in check. As a caregiver you already have huge concerns about the future. No doubt ever since the diagnosis you are left wondering what will become of your loved one and, indeed, what will become of you. These fears and worries are to be expected and certainly deserve attention. Unfortunately your loved one is not the person you should share these concerns with. She is in the vortex of this and cannot help you. There are those who can — friends, your church, and both informal and formal support groups. If it is your spouse who has Alzheimer’s, the most natural thing in the world though will be to turn to your partner and vent. Don’t do it. Resist at all costs. Your spouse with Alzheimer’s just can’t help you, and to try to get him to will only make you feel dismissed.

“I can’t even talk to him anymore. He just doesn’t care about what I am going through.” If you are measuring your loved one’s ability to “care” based on his or her healthy body and mind, you may say these words: caring requires understanding on their part. Caring requires being able to put themselves in your place. It requires cognitive integration of incoming and outgoing messages. The person no longer has these capabilities. The brain controls our emotions as well as cognition and motor behavior. Perhaps one of the hardest things to accept is the fact that even though your loved one looks “normal,” his or her brain is changing. This is an organic reality, not an attitude.

As the disease progresses communication deteriorates on the part of the person with Alzheimer’s. You often find yourself straining to understand what has been said. This is particularly frustrating when it is clear that the individual is upset about something – it is often difficult to put your finger on the source of the distress and the exact nature of the emotion, which are sometimes clear and sometimes baffling. At these times it can be very effective to cut through the content and pay attention to the process of what someone with Alzheimer’s (and other conditions with impaired communication) says. They’re often communicating the emotion pretty effectively, even if the specific content of the communications makes no sense. While the communications may appear garbled and nonsensical at times, you can cut through the apparently meaningless content by paying attention to the emotions your loved one is trying to convey. “She left me at school and I didn’t have any way of getting home,” may appear to be a confused communication where your loved one is regressing to childhood and speaking about a mother or other caregiver. While that may be true cognitively, what is happening emotionally and what is the thought communicating? Pay attention to the emotions and the nonverbal information conveyed – is your loved one afraid? Lonely? Sad? Feeling particularly lost or abandoned? If you attend to the context of the communications you may also pick up important clues. What led up to the communication? Put yourself in the shoes of the person with Alzheimer’s to try and understand his or her reaction.

Empathize with the emotional content of the communications even if you have not understood the content. Pay attention to nonverbal as well as verbal behaviors and you will be able to deduce with a great deal of accuracy what the person is feeling.

Focusing on the emotional content also sometimes provides a sufficient distraction. Sometimes, once the person has made the emotional connection, the specific communication is forgotten and the person is satisfied. It doesn’t always work, but does enough so that it is worth trying each time you are at a loss to understand the content of conversations.

We often don’t remember how complicated speech is and what a complex series of neurological events it requires. Even initiating a sentence can be difficult for someone with Alzheimer’s – initiation is a problem in general. Speech, initiating it, and all of the complicated aspects of adult communication depend on several areas of the brain being intact. With an otherwise healthy brain, we can sometimes compensate if one small area important for speech has a small, circumscribed lesion.

The Alzheimer’s brain has too much global damage for compensation to work as the disease progresses. Given the degree that speech is impacted fairly early on, it is a lot to ask later in the disease for someone to put together comprehensible speech. At times, the best he will be able to do is repeat something another person has just said (echolalia), sometimes over and over (perseveration) until you think you will scream. Remember that this is the best the person can manage. He is reaching out to you without having the communication skills we are used to. If you can, reframe your perception of what communication “should be” and learn to accept what communication the person with Alzheimer’s has to offer – it is all that person has, and all too soon even that will be gone.

Even a one sided conversation can be a rewarding thing if you are communicating with your heart. Tell the person the things that you want her to know, the things that will make her feel loved and safe. Relive your happier moments out loud. Paint a word picture of the moments of your life that were special to you together. You are now the keeper of these memories; share them as stories with the one you love.

There are experts who could tell you in terms most of us do not understand why the human brain is unable to pull up those memories and phrases and names that mean so much to us as caregivers. We ache to hear them say our name or tell us that we are loved. The fact that there is an organic and specific reason why those precious abilities are no longer there will not take away the pain. It does help if you can accept that the brain is an organ that can shut down just as our kidneys can shut down. It is not a willful withdrawal from reality. It is rather a form of brain damage that is cruel in its taking of the things we hold most dear.

There are a lot of good resources out there for helping you discuss the past. “Reminisces” magazine is full of articles and photographs of things from the past. Your family photo album and films are good sources of conversation. Again, do not quiz your loved one by asking; “do you know who that is?” Just point to a picture and make a comment about it. Say something like “doesn’t sis look cute in that dress?” That way the individual with Alzheimer’s is already given the name of the person, but in a way that would not embarrass her. Do not make the mistake about just talking about the past, though. Your loved one needs to talk. Some people are more accustomed to talking about themselves their feelings than others. A person with Alzheimer’s or any other disease, regardless of past history with talking about feelings, needs to know that the floor is open to them and they are free to talk about anything, including their feelings about Alzheimer’s and other pertinent issues. Talk about the present and the future, as well as the past. And remember, having a disease does not mean that it is the only thing that people want to talk about – politics, sports, card games….any subject that was of interest to your loved one in the past should still be topics for discussion. And do not omit humor and laughter!

We are aware of the fact that we refer to Alzheimer’s patients as “them.” It bothers us to even write that word. The problem is they are “them” in the sense that they are not sharing the same reality as you. They may believe that they are living in a different decade, a different part of the world; they are in a different place in their minds when they are in the later stages. If you can respect that and validate the things they tell you, they will feel comfortable talking with you. Validation therapy was conceived beginning in the 1960s and has recently received more attention. Although there are not many studies that look at the efficacy of validation therapy and those few studies that have been run have been quite small (thus yielding results that need to be replicated in larger populations before they can generalize to large groups of people), anecdotal reports about the efficacy of validation have been generally positive. It is basically the idea of joining the individual in his or her reality, rather than correcting the person and trying to force the individual into our reality.

Time is a jumble for people with Alzheimer’s disease – the past, present, and future are intermixed in a way that is confusing for the person with the disease and for caregivers. The reality of someone with Alzheimer’s is foreign to those of us without the disease, but it is their current reality. Meeting them in their place rather than trying to force them into ours often works to improve communication, self-esteem, feelings of peacefulness and safety, harmony, and so on. One caution: choose the times when you engage in validation. Do not validate paranoid ideation, such as often occurs when the individual believes people are stealing or plotting against him or her. In that case, empathize with the individual’s feelings, reassure the individual that he or she is safe, and, if possible, redirect by engaging the person in a pleasurable activity. Use your common sense and you will find pleasant times to join with your loved one in his or her world.

By letting your loved ones feel that they can talk to you and not be challenged about the content of their communications, you will keep the lines of communication open for as long as possible. And when the individual with Alzheimer’s can no longer hold up her end of a conversation, you can communicate safety, love, and respect through your words, your actions, and your loving touch.

Deborah Uetz Author of Into the Mist, When Someone You Love Has Alzheimer’s Disease website http://www.intothemist.us

Posted on Dec 12th, 2006

Just for a moment I want you to imagine that you are coming out of a very deep sleep. If you have ever had surgery try to remember the way you felt as you were trying to make sense of things as you awoke. As you imagine or remember this sensation do you find yourself wondering if it is morning or night? Are you trying to remember where you are? Do you have a startle reaction and think for a moment that you are late for work or forgot to pick up your children at school? I have had that upsetting feeling if I wake up in the middle of the night or even after a nap. Now imagine that same fog every moment of your life…….

So many care givers find themselves frustrated with an Alzheimer’s sufferer. They may say things like "He just doesn’t seem to care if I am with him or not" or "He doesn’t enjoy doing anything any more." I know that it is so hard to accept the changes in your loved one and know that this is going to be your reality. If you can remind yourself that the behaviors are organic it will help. The plaque is building up and spreading over the surface of the brain just as a grassfire moves across a dry field. As it covers more areas your loved falls deeper into that fog. Alzheimer’s disease doesn’t show up like a broken one or a surgical scar but the effects are just as real.

When the things they say or do cause you to feel angry or sad do you best to remember that it is the disease…not your loved one. That’s when it is time for some care giver TLC.

Care giver burnout is a very real occurrence. If you are caring for someone you must include your own needs each day. Your health may decline at a faster rate than the person you are caring for if your dietary, emotional and physical needs are not met. Skipping your checkups with Dr.s is not an option.

You may be asking “How am I supposed to do all of this all by myself?” The answer is simple. You can’t do it all alone. The first step to healthy care giving is accepting the fact that you have limitations. Every human being does. You can only stay awake, maintain your health and keep up with the demands for a limited amount of time. When you reach your limit you may find yourself suffering from care giver burnout. You may have trouble concentrating, experience nervous tension, and you may find it difficult to fight off resentment toward your loved one or others in your family that you feel should be assisting you.

Reach out. Call upon your family, friends, church and community organizations. Your local hospitals will have information regarding community resources. This information can usually be found by contacting the Social Services Department. Another good resource is the Alzheimer’s Association. By taking care of your health you will, in turn be a better care giver.

Deborah Uetz

Author of Into the Mist, When Someone You Love Has Alzheimer’s Disease

Deborah Uetz
Author of Into the Mist, When Someone You Love Has Alzheimer’s Disease website http://www.intothemist.us

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