Sunday, December 30, 2018

7 Categories for Brain Health Safety and Improvement

This information is brought to you via emails from www.bebrainpowerful.org

To keep your brain and your body in tip-top shape follow these simple guidelines:

1.    Food and nutrition – Eat Smart
2.    Physical exercise – Get Your Body Moving
3.    Rest and relaxation – Rest Well/Meditate Deeply
4.    Medical health – Avoid Medical Risks (which links directly to #1, 2, and 3)
5.    Mental Fitness – Strengthen Your Brain by Putting It to Use
6.    Social interaction – Stay Connected

7.    Make an impact – Advocate, Educate, Join, Encourage

Saturday, December 29, 2018

On the Next Visit to With Your Doctor...

ASK THE QUESTIONS: 
1.    Are there things I can do today (eating right, mental and physical exercise, etc.) to help 
preserve my cognitive health? Please give me a potential regime.
2.    How can I test or track my cognitive health over time? Is there a good record book for this?
3.    If I’m feeling concerned about my cognitive health, or if I notice symptoms of Alzheimer’s or other dementias, what steps should I take? How can I distinguish between Alzheimer’s and normal aging? Who are my best contacts? What actions should I take now and plan for in the future?
4.    My family has a history of dementia – how can I best prepare myself and my family? What are the best resources to guide me and my family along this potential journey?
5.    I’d like to help support women’s brain health research. Are you aware of any clinical trials I might qualify for? 


www.bebrainpowerful.org 

Women and Alzheimer's Disease

KNOW THE FACTS ABOUT ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE
  • Alzheimer’s places an unequal burden. Women are twice as likely to suffer from Alzheimer’s disease as men, making up 2/3 of the 5.7 million people in the United States living with dementia. 
  • Alzheimer’s is a pressing issue. After the age of 65, women are twice as likely to develop Alzheimer’s as breast cancer.
  • It’s Time to Talk. 60%-80% of cases of cognitive impairment in individuals above the age of 65 go unrecognized, undiagnosed, not addressed. Join “Let’s Talk About It” – a safe discussion group that meets the 2ndWednesday of each month at 10:20 am at Humboldt General Hospital.  

You Are Not Alone. Nearly 70% of women surveyed by Women Against Alzheimer’s and Healthy Women expressed interest in learning more about how to measure and track their brain health. 

KNOWLEDGE IS POWERFUL

Sunday, December 9, 2018

Dementia, Alzheimer's, and Legal Planning

I am not an expert on legal planning and so my first recommendation has to be to schedule an appointment with your lawyer, an elder lawyer, or financial planner as you gather up your legal papers and prepare for a visit. You want everything laid and and smooth for the future with matters concerning health decisions, financial expectations, and final wishes. Letting family know now, when you are of sound mind and body, alleviates problems and confusion in the future.
Many families have Powers of Attorney in order, however, sometimes possibilities are not considered such as moving to another state (when sometimes legal papers do not cross state lines) or changes in family status or finances. Such documents need to be reviewed each year so that everyone is current on future plans.
It is also important that should you become incapacitated, unable to control your own destiny, other may step in with their demands. For example, if you have listed "no heroic measures" are to be undertaken to save your life when it is ready to be complete, a spouse or child may decided s/he is not ready and thus a life may be prolonged while legal and medical matters are sorted out.
In your desire to make everything fair, often this is impossible. Everyone has a slightly different description of "fair". Sue gets Grand-dad's old car - valuable but something she has no interest in preserving - while Alex receives a hefty check. While the two are of apparent equal value one is a potential pay-out while the other has immediate cash value. Suppose Sue wants to sell the old-mobile but the family sends a flurries of "No!" It is hers to sell but at what price in relationships?
After your visit with counsel, you'll have a better idea of how to divide your estate and estate responsibilities evenly. You also need to communicate this orally or in writing in advance. No surprises may prevent at least some potential squabbles when you can longer speak up.

Friday, December 7, 2018

Holiday Thoughts - Adjusted Expectations

Tips for Creating a Smooth and Enjoyable Holiday
  • ·     Familiarize invited guests with household changes
  •    Do what only what feels reasonable and within your limits - potluck is fine
  • ·     Involve your loved one who has dementia in safe, manageable activities
  • ·     Maintain normal routines as much as possible
  • ·     Build on traditions and memories
  • ·     Adapt gift-giving – gifts that are useful like ID bracelets, photos albums, easy-on-and-off clothing
  • ·     Avoid gifts like difficult board games, puzzles with too many pieces, complicated electronics, surprise pets
  • ·     Try to be flexible – think about celebrating with brunch or lunch instead of dinner. Evenings and darkness add to confusion.
  • ·     Avoid excess noise and crowds
  • ·     Share good times and celebrate joy


Thursday, December 6, 2018

Accessible Bathrooms

Anyone with infants or small children can relate to the disastrous feeling upon entering a bathroom to find no changing table available. Although over time more and more of these have appeared in women's bathrooms, Dads sometimes need to change diapers, too. Their choices? A knee balancing act, a public bench, or eek! the floor of the men's bathroom - or any bathroom, for that matter. The same is true for caregivers with a loved one with incontinence. Imagine the chagrin of dripping or messy pants while out shopping with no family accessible bathroom. Yes, the twosome can jam into a single stall or wiggle into a handicap accessible stall, but what if the caregiver is female and the care recipient male? Then what? Women tend to gawk or squawk as a man is led by the hand into the secret potty realm; men tend to look puzzled and embarrassed. Regardless of reception, changing an adult's pants is difficult, messy, impossible in cramped quarters, and a heartbreak.
You might wonder, Why not just stay at home? Why not just leave the loved one in the car? Why not buy adult diapers? While each of these is a potential solution, to maintain a sense of normalcy and purpose, it is important for caregivers to get out; it is equally important for care recipients to maintain a semblance of former routines. While in later stages of dementia adult diapers can be "snuck" on, in the early stages a formerly dignified and independent individual is now faced with the humiliation of wadded bundles of padding bulkily sticking out of pants hat odd angles. Who wants this?
One solution is, of course, education. the public needs to realize the value of trips out and the need for restroom stops. Family bathrooms are a super solution. And if space and adequate room do not exist, informed business owners and employees who assist the caregiver and clear the bathroom area are needed and much appreciated. Being kind is the right decision.