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10 Commandments of Reliable Caregivers’ Elder Care by Francisco Jarlos, Caregiver

  1. Speak to the client. There is nothing so nice as a cheerful word of greeting.
  2. Call client by name. The sweetest music to anyone’s ears is the sound of his/her own name.
  3. Smile at the client. It takes 72 muscles to frown and only 14 to smile.
  4. Be friendly and helpful. If you would have friends, be a friend.
  5. Be considerate with the feelings of the clients. There are usually three sides to a controversy: yours, the other fellows, and the right side.
  6. Be alert to give service. What counts most in life is what we can do for others.
  7. Be generous with praise, cautious with criticism.
  8. Be cordial. Speak and act as if everything you do is a genuine pleasure.
  9. Be genuinely interested in people. You can like almost everybody if you try.
  10. Add to this a good sense of humor, a big dose of patience and a dash of humility and you will be rewarded many-fold.

Top 10 Money Saving Tips for Seniors

If you’re living on a fixed income, every penny counts!  The National Council on Aging (NCOA) has some very useful information for elders.  Click here to connect to this helpful article.  Use this checklist to make sure you’re saving money where you can.

Caregiver Training/In-Service

In-Service with Margaret Wallace, certified Wellness Coach and Recreation Therapist working with elders for more than 15 years.

Reliable Caregivers believes that the best care comes from the most highly qualified caregivers.  We provide ongoing training for our caregivers to help them learn and grow in their profession.

Caregiver Wellness, Tuesday, August 23rd:

The purpose of this in-service is to develop a greater understanding of the elements of wellness and how it applies to the quality of life for a professional caregiver and their clients.  The attending caregiver will come away with self-identified tools to increase their own well-being as well as that of their client.

Alzheimer’s Disease – Sleeplessness and Sundowning

Sleeping problems experienced by individuals with Alzheimer’s and caregiver exhaustion are two of the most common reasons people with Alzheimer’s are eventually placed in nursing homes. Some studies indicate that as many as 20 percent of persons with Alzheimer’s will, at some point, experience periods of increased confusion, anxiety, agitation and disorientation beginning at dusk and continuing throughout the night.While experts are not certain how or why these behaviors occur, many attribute them to late-day confusion, or “sundowning,” caused by the following factors:

  • end-of-day exhaustion (mental and physical)
  • an upset in the “internal body clock,” causing a biological mix-up between day and night
  • reduced lighting and increased shadows
  • disorientation due to the inability to separate dreams from reality when sleeping
  • less need for sleep, which is common among older adults

Tips for reducing evening agitation and nighttime sleeplessness:

  • Plan more active days. A person who rests most of the day is likely to be awake at night. Discourage afternoon napping and plan activities, such as taking a walk, throughout the day.
  • Monitor diet. Restrict sweets and caffeine consumption to the morning hours. Serve dinner early, and offer only a light meal before bedtime.
  • Seek medical advice. Physical ailments, such as bladder or incontinence problems, could be making it difficult to sleep. Your doctor may also be able to prescribe medication to help the person relax at night.
  • Change sleeping arrangements. Allow the person to sleep in a different bedroom, in a favorite chair or wherever it’s most comfortable. Also, keep the room partially lit to reduce agitation that occurs when surroundings are dark or unfamiliar.

Nighttime restlessness doesn’t last forever. It typically peaks in the middle stages, then diminishes as the disease progresses. In the meantime, caregivers should make sure their home is safe and secure, especially if the person with Alzheimer’s wanders. Restrict access to certain rooms or levels by closing and locking doors, and install tall safety gates between rooms. Door sensors and motion detectors can be used to alert family members when a person is wandering.

Once the person is awake and upset, experts suggest that caregivers:

    • approach their loved one in a calm manner
    • find out if there is something he or she needs
    • gently remind him or her of the time
    • avoid arguing or asking for explanations
    • offer reassurance that everything is all right and everyone is safe

written by the Alzheimer’s Association – Click to view the entire article

 

 

Multitasking ‘Switch’ Doesn’t Work as Well in Older Brains

Warning: Don’t let anyone interrupt you while you’re reading this. Not if you’re over 60 and want to remember it, anyway. Older brains, it turns out, aren’t wired to handle interruptions with ease. That’s one of the intriguing findings of a new study that examines how well the brains of different age groups remember and switch back and forth among short-term or working memories when multitasking.

Working memory holds information in the mind for brief intervals, an ability essential to mental functioning. The new research reveals that younger brains switch very quickly between two different neurological networks — one encodes short-term memory, while the other is activated when we need to pay attention to something new. For older brains, the switch is harder.

The findings, published in the April 11 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, have some important implications in a world where multitasking is seen as an essential skill.

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) used sophisticated brain-imaging techniques to uncover why the brain responds differently to multitasking — or remembering to complete a task — after a distraction. And they found that something more fundamental than just memory is involved: The brains of aging adults are far less adept at switching between the two neural networks, one for memory and another for attention.

Using magnetic resonance imaging to track blood flow, researchers asked two groups — one whose average age was 24 and another whose ages averaged 69 — to briefly view a nature scene. When a face suddenly popped up, the subjects were asked to determine the age and gender of the face, and then asked to recall the original nature scene. The brain scans showed that the memory-encoding networks of the younger group fired up again right after the unexpected distraction, quickly refocusing on the nature scene. The brains of the older adults proved more rigid, failing to disengage from the interruption and reestablish the neural connections needed to switch back to focusing on the original memory.

“This study provides the first understanding of the neural brain mechanisms responsible for multitasking and memory in older adults,” says the study’s senior author, Adam Gazzaley, M.D., director of the UCSF Neuroscience Imaging Center. The research also shows that working memory is very fragile, he says. “Over the course of seconds, one interruption erases memory quality.”

The research provides a “biological window” into some of the “inefficiencies” of the aging brain, says Ronald C. Petersen, M.D., neurologist and director of the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center.

Work is already under way in Gazzaley’s lab to develop brain-training software that might help older adults better cope with interruptions.

 Stein, Loren – AARP Bulletin – May 3, 2011

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