What a Good Read!
July 25, 2011 at 10:30 am | Posted in Pat Linard, PR | Leave a commentTags: Alzheimer's Disease, Caregiver, Eldercare, Life, Memory, News, Research
I read a good book recently, Finding Life in the Land of Alzheimer’s by Lauren Kessler. The author is a journalist who feels that she failed in the role of caregiver for her mother who had Alzheimer’s. So when her mother passed away, she decided to give it another try, but in a different way. She went undercover as an aide in a dementia care facility.
What Lauren found was that aides in dementia care facilities are underpaid and usually living from hand to mouth. Their workload is heavy and their day is challenging both physically and emotionally. In many cases, the job of aide is not the only one that they hold. Their day is repetitive in the tasks they do but not in the challenges that interrupt those tasks. Quite often they are the caregiver that is there when a resident falls or has an accident or has an aggressive episode.
What Lauren also found was that she became attached to these elderly men and women with Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia. Yes, they experienced behaviors typical to the disease, such as repeatedly asking the same question or experiencing episodes of paranoia, but they also had personality. And each one was an individual in many of the same ways that they had always been an individual before they were diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. They were able to experience emotions like you or I, and although they didn’t have a memory of things that just passed, they were able to enjoy life in the moment.
The statistics for Alzheimer’s are staggering and worth us paying attention to as a nation, and as a world. Today, 5.4 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s disease. By 2050, as many as 16 million Americans will have the disease. Of Americans aged 65 and over, 1 in 8 has Alzheimer’s and nearly half of people aged 85 and older will have the disease. For more information on this devastating disease, go to Alz.org. Geriatric care managers and other healthcare professionals can help families in caring for a loved one in caring for those with dementia. To find a geriatric care manger in your area, visit CareManager.
Distinctive Care Geriatric Care Management serves Bergen, Passaic, Rockland and Orange County with nurses licensed in New Jersey and New York. We help families dealing with various issues related to their elderly loved ones and would be happy to discuss any concerns you may have related to long term care. Please contact us in our Ridgewood Office at 201-587-5283 to schedule a consultation.
Coconut Oil and Alzheimer’s
May 12, 2011 at 10:30 am | Posted in Amy Shein, GCM | Leave a commentTags: Alzheimer's Disease, Dementia, Diet, Education, Health, Memory, Research, Tips
I have a client that has used Coconut Oil to help treat her problems with dementia. Her daughter had actually researched it and had told me all about the oil and how it could help with her memory problem concerns. So, I decided to do a little research myself. Many studies over 6 years ago have been done in Europe on MCT (Medium Chain Triglycerides) and the positive effects they may have on people suffering with Alzheimer’s. It really came to fruition 3 years ago for Dr Mary Newport, who wanted to have her husband enrolled in a clinical trial to help him with his diagnosis of a rapidly progressive Alzheimer’s. Dr Newport did some intense research and found out that the drug’s main active ingredient in the clinical trial was that of MCT (medium Chain Triglycerides). MCT are natural fatty acids that are abundant in coconut oil. The increased intake of MCT can help the brain increase its function. Research has shown that Alzheimer’s patient’s brains have difficulty metabolizing glucose, the main source of energy for your brain. Without glucose, your brain cells may die. Scientists have discovered an alternative source of energy for your brain cells. Special fats that are called Ketones. Ketones are a high energy source that nourished the brain. When you eat MCT oil, the liver converts it into ketones, rather than being stored as fat.
Dr Newport researched and found out the Virgin Coconut Oil is more than 60% MCT oil and the clinical drug trial derived it’s oil from coconut trees. Dr Newport stated “It was like the oil kicked in and he could think clearly again.” Dr Newport noticed a difference on the first day that her husband took the coconut oil. He then continued to take the oil everyday and by the fifth day there was a tremendous improvement.
I took my client to see her Neurologist and we discussed using coconut oil to help with her memory. He said a few of his patients have been trying this sort of “food medicine” and is not sure it truly effective, but it is most definitely not harmful. It is always best to speak with your doctor and discuss any changes in medication or diet. Just because it is safe for one person, doesn’t mean that it is safe for you. If you would like to learn more about the use of coconut oil for dementia, please check out these websites, here and here.
Distinctive Care Geriatric Care Management serves Bergen, Passaic, Rockland and Orange County with nurses licensed in New Jersey and New York. We help families dealing with various issues related to their elderly loved ones and would be happy to discuss any concerns you may have related to long term care. Please contact us in our Ridgewood Office at 201-587-5283 to schedule a consultation.
There’s Lots of Training Behind a CMC
February 28, 2011 at 10:30 am | Posted in Pat Linard, PR | Leave a commentTags: Caregiver, CMC, Education, Research, Tips
CMC. In the profession of caring for older adults, those three letters, CMC, stand for Care Manager Certified. Three simple letters but there is a lot behind it. This designation is conferred by the National Academy of Certified Care Managers (NACCM) when a professional has demonstrated a wealth of experience, sufficient education and sits for a rigorous national exam.
Before someone can even be eligible to take the exam, they must first qualify under three areas of criteria. The first is education. Each candidate must have either an RN diploma, a bachelor’s degree, or a Master’s degree. The second criteria is experience. Each candidate must have 2 – 3 years of paid, full time, supervised experience in the field of care management. The third criteria is direct client contact. Two to four years of recent experience in a field related to care management is required; that would include nursing, social work, counseling, psychology, rehabilitation, gerontology and public health or human services.
In order to become a full member of the National Association of Professional Geriatric Care Managers, (NAPGCM), one must have a CMC or other similar credential, such as Certified Case Manager, CCM; Certified Advanced Social Worker in Case Management, L-ASWCM or Certified Social Work Case Manager, C-SWCM.
Why would someone want someone who has met the qualifications to become a member of the NAPGCM? When you hire someone who is a member of the National Association of Professional Geriatric Care managers, you know you are getting the help and expertise of a geriatric care manager with a CMC or other similar credential. You are assured that you are working with a trained professional whose skills and competencies in the field of health and human services are well rounded, up-to-date and backed by experience, whether it be in a hospital, nursing home, assisted living facility, home health or any other similar background that helps the elderly. That’s the kind of help that can help in the best way possible. And that’s the kind of help that we provide at Distinctive Care Geriatric Care Management in Ridgewood, NJ.
Distinctive Care Geriatric Care Management serves Bergen, Passaic, Rockland and Orange County with nurses licensed in New Jersey and New York. We help families dealing with various issues related to their elderly loved ones and would be happy to discuss any concerns you may have related to long term care. Please contact us in our Ridgewood Office at 201-587-5283 to schedule a consultation.
More obesity blues: Research shows brains of obese people have less tissue
October 18, 2009 at 12:00 pm | Posted in Sophia Heftler, GCM | Leave a commentTags: Brain, Obese, Research, Tissue
UCLA–Pittsburgh study finds brain-tissue loss increases risk of Alzheimer’s
Elderspeak
January 14, 2009 at 8:00 am | Posted in Sophia Heftler, GCM | Leave a commentTags: Alzheimer's Disease, Dementia, Research, Tips
As a Geriatric Care Manager the most important principles I uphold in caring for my Clients are Independence, Autonomy and Dignity. I truly believe in the importance of these principles in providing the best quality of life possible for those whose care is entrusted to my practice.
One of the most challenging aspects of communication with someone who has dementia is helping caregivers understand the significance of avoiding elderspeak. Elderspeak is a form of communication similar to baby talk. Elderspeak includes simplified grammar and vocabulary, substitution of collective pronouns and overly intimate endearments.
Research reported in the summer of 2008 by the Alzheimer’s Association suggested that elderspeak could make those living with Alzheimer’s Disease or other forms of dementia more resistant to care. Study participants were more likely to respond positively and to be cooperative when spoken to normally as adults.
It is important that family members and caregivers understand the impact their communications can have on their loved-ones quality of life.
This new research is proof positive of the importance of treating our older adults with dignity…one of the principles Distinctive Care Geriatric Care Management is founded on.
Blood Sugar Control Linked to Memory Decline
January 7, 2009 at 3:12 pm | Posted in Mark Heftler, Admin | Leave a commentTags: Cognitive Ability, Dementia, Diabetes, Glucose, Research
According to a recent study conducted by researchers at Columbia University Medical Center, spikes in blood sugar can take a toll on memory retention by affected the area of the brain that helps form memories. It was discovered that these effects were also apparent even when glucose levels are only moderately elevated. Such a discovery will certainly be helpful in explaining normal, age-related cognitive decline, due to the fact that glucose regulation declines with age.
This fact has two serious implications, both of which are summed up nicely by quotes from the lead investigator, Dr. Scott Small. “If we conclude this is underlying normal age-related cognitive decline, then it affects all of us.” A person’s ability to properly regulate levels of glucose begins to decline by the third or fourth decade of life.
The second implication relies heavily on the fact that physical activity has been proven to improve glucose regulation. “We have a behavioral recommendation,” Dr. Scott states, “physical exercise.” In a study mapping brain functions of 240 elderly subjects, a correlation was found between elevated glucose levels and reduced cerebral blood volume. This is an indication of reduced metabolic function and activity in that region of the brain.
This research will also have consequences for those adults suffering from diabetes. Many times in past research, links have been discovered between diabetes and dementia, as well as dsyfunctions in the dentate gyrus (area of the brain where memories are formed), but these new findings cement the reasoning behind the research. Aging with diabetes can have serious negative affects on cognitive ability.
Hopefully this research will bring to light new methods to fight dementia via better control of blood glucose levels.
Link.
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