Wednesday, 5 November 2014

Low-income, elderly residents can apply for assistance with heating costs

Low-income residents who need help paying to heat their homes this winter can apply for assistance beginning Monday.


The CSRA Economic Opportunity Authority will begin accepting applications for Richmond County citizens who are 65 years and older. Only 150 applications will be accepted daily through Nov. 14. No applications will be taken on Veterans Day, Nov. 11.

To qualify for the Energy Assistance Program, residents must be responsible for paying the energy cost for the home’s primary heating source; a U.S. citizen or legally admitted alien; and have an income at or below 160 percent of the poverty level for Georgia.

Apply at the Carrie J. Mays Family Life Center, 1014 Eleventh Ave. between the hours of 7:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. Bring a photo ID, Social Security cards for all household members, proof of income in the past 30 days and the most recent heating bill.

All household members must be 65 years and older. An authorized representative can apply on behalf of homebound citizens. Applications are accepted on a first-come, first-served basis.

For more information, call (706) 724-0701 or (877) 724-0706.

Cache Valley Volunteer Center offering help with shoveling for elderly, disabled

The Cache Valley Volunteer Center is inviting people who are elderly, disabled, home-bound or have other limitations to get help shoveling their walks this winter through the Sidewalk Snow Removal Assistance program.

Snow Removal Assistance is in its second year. The program was instigated by Logan city to ensure sidewalks are cleared in accordance with city code, understanding that some people are physically unable to do so.

“It was pretty successful last year,” said Debra Byington, outreach specialist at the center. “There were about 25 (individuals served). We’re hoping for more this year.”

The volunteer center works with different community groups to have them shovel walks after each snowfall, she said. Typically, they can get the walks shoveled within the day or evening after a storm.

Byington said if people signed up last winter, they need to sign up again if they want snow removal services this year.

To sign up for snow removal, call Byington at 764-6311.

Blessing aims to help elderly patients recover faster

QUINCY, Ill. (WGEM) -

A new Blessing Hospital program aims to help elderly patients recover faster from broken hips.

The Break Free Program was announced Friday morning.

Hospital officials say one in four people who suffer a hip fracture, die as a result of complications.

This new program helps patients get into surgery with 24 hours, and up and moving quickly after surgery.

"Not just fast but excellent recovery," Dr. Rena Stewart said. "We are trying to get patients back as close to the state they were in before they had the broken hip."

The hospital says the program does not cost extra, it's a coordination between the primary care provider, surgeons and staff. 

Seek Help From Carpet Cleaners Aberdeen

Carpet cleaning AberdeenWith the proper cleaning strategy, cleaning products, and accessories, an experienced carpet better does not only fresh carpet more effectively and efficiently, they also extend the life of carpet. The carpet cleaning Aberdeen, use many equipments, machines and fabric solution that extract all the dust from the carpet. For best assist by the expert cleaners this is right time. The carpet cleaning is the right choice and these days offers more than one carpet cleaning techniques, which are capable of cleaning and removing nearly all kinds of stains. Cleaning is turning out to be an increasingly trendy method of cleaning carpets.

Cleaners Aberdeen provides an array of house cleaning services, have a perfect cleaning routine for your carpets, which keeps them odorless, dirt less and as good as new. Such is the magnitude of expertise of the carpet cleaners Aberdeen. If your office and/or is home carpeted in that case you are accustomed to stubborn blemishes of footwear marks, spilled drinks, water stains, etc. Even though you take excellent care of your rugs by vacuuming often and spot cleaning when needed, there are a few hard-to-clean blemishes that need special consideration. You can call the carpet cleaners in Aberdeen if you are looking for a cleaning service. They will initially come with an estimate. The senior professional will enquire about the carpet and makes a remark about the carpet and it would be ideal right if you can sew the ragged edges or torn parts of a carpet.

Tuesday, 4 November 2014

Caring for an elderly relative at home

Decisions about providing care for an aging loved one are seldom easy. Various options exist in terms of elder care, including assisted living facilities and nursing homes. Seniors who are self-sufficient may be able to stay in a retirement community or active living building. In other instances, the best course of action is to have an elderly relative move in with family members.

According to Dr. Nancy Snyderman, who recently took on the role of caregiver to her own senior parents, 44 million American adults are caring for an older friend or family member. MetLife estimates that nearly 10 million adult children over age 50 now care for an aging parent. Care is defined as helping with feeding, bathing, dressing, and other personal care needs, going beyond driving a parent to appointments or helping them with financial matters.

Taking care of a senior requires a profound commitment and can completely disrupt a person’s life, both at home and at work. Men and women faced with caring for an aging parent at home may want to employ several strategies to make that transition go as smoothly as possible.Talk to the senior about your options. Making decisions together will be best for everyone involved. It can be challenging to discuss mortality and whether or not elderly parents or relatives can properly care for themselves. Broach the subject well in advance of making any plans so you will have some understanding of how the senior feels about the situation and what would make him or her most comfortable. Your parents may already have a plan in place.

Establish a caregiving budget. Caring for the elderly is expensive. MetLife says working Americans lose an estimated $3 trillion in lifetime wages, with average losses of $324,044 for women and $283,716 for men, taking time to provide care. Before a senior can be welcomed into your home, you must first determine which financial changes must be made to accommodate this person. Will a parent be contributing to a portion of the expenses or paying rent? Is it feasible for you to reduce hours at work to care for this individual? Once you have the numbers in black and white, you can better assess your situation.

Make physical modifications. Your home may not be equipped and safe for an elderly resident. You may need to add a private space for your parent or relative, and install night lights, secured railings, grab bars, ramps, a shower chair, and anti-slip surfaces. You may need to build an extension on the home or completely renovate what you have to make the space safe.

Aim for stability. Moving and changing routines can be especially stressful for seniors who are used to their own schedules and habits. Transfer furniture and mementos from their home into yours. Encourage seniors to maintain a social schedule and invite friends over. Try to help your loved one keep his or her doctors and, if possible, take them to shop where they have shopped in the past. These opportunities will make the transition to a new home easier.

Discuss finances. It’s essential to understand your loved one’s financial situation. Make lists of his or her assets and any insurance policies in his or her name. Understand which health procedures are covered and discuss ways to finance any procedures or medications that are not covered by your loved one’s policy. Ask if your loved one wants you to manage his or her finances or when he or she may feel this is necessary. Professional help, such as an attorney, financial planner or a geriatric care manager, can make it easier to understand the legalities and subtleties of these arrangements.

Make time for yourself. Caring for the elderly can seem like a full-time job, and it’s easy to forget yourself in the process. Make time for yourself so your own health is not sacrificed while you tend to your loved one.

Elderly Paulding woman scammed out of thousands

Paulding County, GA —

She was trying to help law enforcement. Instead, she was scammed out of thousands of dollars.

The elderly Paulding County woman told deputies it had happened before. So when the man and woman wearing badges showed up at her door, she was only too willing to help.

“(The criminals) knew she’d been victimized in the past,” said Cpl. Ashley Henson at the Paulding County Sheriff’s Office. “They told her they had a suspect and that they needed her to go withdraw some money from her bank.”

The ersatz law officers told their elderly victim that one suspect in the earlier attempt to scam her was a teller at the Sun Trust Bank branch inside the Publix store at Lost Mountain in Cobb County.

The elderly woman complied with what she thought was a request from law enforcement. As a third suspect watched from inside the store, she withdrew thousands of dollars and handed it over. The suspects told her they would deliver a $10,000 reward to her home within 45-minutes.

Days later, she’s still waiting.

Store surveillance cameras captured one of the suspects, pictured here. Paulding County detectives are asking for help in tracking down the trio.

Toyama restyles day care industry with all-in-one solution

TOYAMA – Sitting around a table, a dozen elderly women watch affectionately as small children play next to them. When one opens her book, a little boy runs up and asks, “What are you reading?”

It’s a typical scene at Konoyubi Tomare, a day care facility in the city of Toyama. The elderly women are being cared for because they have dementia, and the children because their parents are at work, explained Kayoko Soman, one of the facility’s founders.

“We see no need to separate the elderly from the children, or the disabled from the able-bodied,” Soman said.

“The children’s presence alone is enough to make the old ladies smile,” she added. “At the same time, the grannies will also reprimand the kids if they become too rowdy. That’s all natural, since this is how we normally live in our own homes.”

Soman and two former colleagues launched the first Konoyubi Tomare house in 1993 under the principle of keeping its doors open to all: children, the elderly, the disabled and everyone else — all under one roof. This unique system, which later came to be dubbed the “Toyama style,” has had such a great impact that more than 1,400 nursing and day care facilities across Japan have adopted such a policy.

What initially inspired Soman, who spent 20 years as a nurse at Toyama Red Cross Hospital, to enter the nursing care business was her encounter with an elderly woman who had been hospitalized by a stroke.

As the woman’s condition improved, she was given permission to be released and wanted to return to her home. But due to family constraints, she ended up being transferred to another hospital instead.

“I want to make wishes come true for the elderly who want to go home, and to enable them to live their last moments happily,” Soman said. “I also want to help families whose members are too busy with work and cannot care for the elderly.”

Soman and her partners decided to open a facility just for that purpose. But during consultations with city officials, they were told the facility must narrow its services to one particular kind of clientele — the elderly, disabled or children — to qualify for subsidies.

“If that’s the case, we don’t want the subsidies,” Soman recalled thinking.

Pooling together their retirement funds with some loans, the three forged ahead with their project.

On the first day of business, a young mother came in with her 3-year-old son, who had cerebral palsy. Soman said she still remembers the smile on her face when she returned that afternoon to pick him up. She said it was the first time she’d been able to go to the hairdresser’s since he was born.

The following year, in 1994, Japan entered its “aged society” era as people 65 or older surpassed 14 percent of the population. Along with the rise in working women, the nation as a whole began to see the need to shift nursing care responsibilities, traditionally the family’s domain, toward specialized facilities and other support frameworks at the community level.

The Toyama Prefectural Government began making subsidies available for Soman’s day care services in 1996. Two years later, it went further by offering subsidies to all such facilities that care for both the elderly and disabled under one roof, giving the Toyama style nationwide legitimacy.

In 1999, the facility was recognized as an incorporated nonprofit organization. By coincidence, the day on which they were certified at City Hall — May 12 — was Florence Nightingale’s birthday, which is marked by International Nurses Day.

Thanks to the subsidies, they were able to ease the financial burden on some clients. As the business grew, they hired more staff and opened a facility for overnight stays.

In time, as they addressed customers’ needs, Soman and her co-founders saw the business expand to six different areas, including employment support for the disabled.

“We aspire to be a foothold for the community, to be right there when the need arises, just like convenience stores,” Soman said.

The future of Japanese nursing care is not without challenges, however. The national labor shortage is a particularly grave issue, with experts estimating that Japan will be about 1 million employees short in a decade’s time.

One solution is to fill the gap with foreigners. Of the roughly 1.68 million nursing care workers in Japan, according to health ministry estimates, only 200 are foreigners who came to Japan under economic partnership agreements or other arrangements and are still working in the field.

Until about 10 years ago, Soman was against the idea of employing foreigners as caretakers. Back then, the labor shortage was not as serious and she felt that “responsibility for the care of Japanese people should be borne by the Japanese people.”

But then the day came when reality hit, and Soman realized that less than half of the seats were being filled at her recruitment events. After seeing foreign workers contributing actively in other industries, she now thinks it is only reasonable to seek their help in the field of nursing care, too.

“I’m confident that we can move forward by breaking down the barriers and not discriminating against anyone, not only on the side of those being cared for, but also on the side of the caregivers,” Soman said.