It’s never easy to say goodbye
February 23, 2011 at 10:30 am | Posted in Joanne Jordan, Office Manager | Leave a commentTags: Life, Personal, Support, Technology
This has been rough week for me, since I learned that a friend is dying of pancreatic cancer. Diagnosed only last month, she has declined so rapidly that she has already been moved into hospice. Two months ago, I would have described her as a woman who ran the New York City Marathon in November, who built a large and successful medical practice, who has a kind and generous spirit and a heart of gold. She will leave behind four children. She is only 48.
This is so hard for me to accept.
I am not among her closest friends, nor am I family, so it would be intrusive of me to visit when time is so precious to her. Fortunately, I learned that I’m able to stay connected through an organization called CaringBridge. It offers free personal and private websites that connect people experiencing a significant health challenge to family and friends. CaringBridge websites offer a private forum to communicate and show support, saving time and emotional strength when health matters most. Designated authors leave medical updates and photos on the site, and visitors can sign the guestbook, offering a patient messages of love, hope and compassion, which they can access whenever they feel up to it.
In the past month, my friend’s site has been visited more than 35,000 times. Knowing how draining it can be to have a loved one hospitalized and to also field calls from concerned friends and relatives, I’m sure this service is a godsend for exhausted family members. I’m equally sure that the outpouring of love and support can only be a source of strength and courage for any patient facing a difficult battle.
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.
Stressed Out?
January 4, 2011 at 12:00 pm | Posted in Pat Linard, PR | Leave a commentTags: Seminar, Stress, Support, Tips
Stress! It’s a word we hear a lot about during the holidays. And with good reason. The holidays are not only filled with lots on everyone’s “to do” list but they are also a time filled with lots of emotion and expectation, whether it is anticipation of a special gift or social event or the letdown of a gift that is not so special or an event that didn’t fill our dreams.
But stress is not limited to the holidays. That’s why Distinctive Care Geriatric Care Management of Ridgewood, New Jersey will be participating in a special panel presentation being sponsored by the Mahwah Regional Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday, February 16 from 8 to 10am. Breakfast will be served to ease the stress of getting out of the house for an early morning meeting!
The panel will focus on stress at all ages. Bergen County Mental Health will speak on stress in children and adolescents, Valley Healthcare will address stress in adults and Sophia Heftler, RN, CMC, CALA, CDP® from Distinctive Care will talk about the stress that older adults feel as they go through the aging process. And to ease the stress there will be chair massages and reflexology and lots of networking.
Attendance is not limited to Mahwah Chamber members but is open to the public. Nearby neighbors in both Passaic County and Rockland County, NY are welcome to attend. This stress-relieving breakfast will be held at the Doubletree Inn in Mahwah, New Jersey. Call (201) 526-5566 to make a reservation.
Planning Ahead for Elder Care
December 31, 2010 at 12:00 pm | Posted in Pat Linard, PR | Leave a commentTags: Aging, Caregiver, Caregiver Burnout, GCM, Prevention, Support, Tips
My phone has been ringing over the holidays. I’ve gotten those treasured calls from family, of course. And I’ve gotten a lot of phone calls from friends that moved away from New Jersey where I live and from friends in Pennsylvania where I used to live. And then I’ve gotten few phone calls from friends who know that I work in geriatric care management. Those calls aren’t the ones I like to receive quite as much.
As I mentioned in an earlier blog, my friend in Kentucky is trying to arrange for geriatric care for her elderly parents in Florida. My other call was from a neighbor whose friend had a sudden fall on Christmas Eve and is now in the hospital. She also called me a few days earlier because this same friend is scheduled for heart valve replacement surgery in January. She wanted some advice on how to make her rehabilitation an easy one.
I am always happy to give some advice in these situations. What was especially pleasing is that my neighbor was helping her friend plan for her surgery. Things go so much better with a care plan. So many people think that they must only go to the nursing home and rehabilitation center that the hospital recommends after surgery. Quite often that is a good recommendation but not always. It helps to do some research to make sure you find the best quality of care in an environment that suits you best. It is news to many people that these facilities can be toured in advance. Of course, availability could be a problem so it is wise to have a back-up or two.
She was also checking into whether her friend had her legal documents in order. A will is the first thing people think of but with a hospital stay, an Advance Directive or Durable Healthcare Power of Attorney becomes even more important. That is the document that provides a way for you to convey end-of-life care decisions ahead of time. Our favorite at Distinctive Care Geriatric Care Management in Ridgewood, New Jersey is the Five Wishes. It is a legal document that is accepted in most states. You can find the form at www.agingwithdignity.org. I am hoping this document will not be needed in the Bergen County hospital where she is now, but it is wise to think ahead.
My neighbor was also thinking of things like laundry and food for her friend. Her friend was doing many of the things that we, at Distinctive Care, would do as geriatric care managers. Of course, we can also provide the extra care that a friend cannot—expert nursing skills, training in dementia care, 24/7 emergency care, and experience in dealing with crisis situations. But she was planning with knowledge and forethought and that is what we realize at Distinctive Care can be key to a good outcome and a good recovery.
Geriatric Care Management Makes it Easier
December 29, 2010 at 1:26 pm | Posted in Pat Linard, PR | Leave a commentTags: Caregiver, Family, geriatric care management, Support, Tips
It’s that time of year again! No, I don’t mean the holidays, although it is related to the holidays. What I mean is that it is the time of year when families are getting together, especially those that live far apart and don’t see each other often. Unfortunately, for many families, it brings more than the joy of reuniting with loved ones. For some, it brings the reality that, in many cases, elderly parents are not in as good health, homes need repair or decluttering, and mental abilities appear to be declining. It is the time of year when many families are faced with the reality that they need to take action to provide assistance to families living at a distance.
Geriatric care management was created for just such a situation. I’ve been emailing a close friend of mine a lot this past week. We used to spend a lot of time together when she lived in New Jersey. Her parents are visiting from Florida. Mom’s Parkinson’s Disease is getting worse and she is exhibiting some worrisome behaviors. Dad is feeling the burden of taking care. And my friend who now lives in Kentucky is worried since she can’t be there with them when they return to Florida.
Distinctive Care is located in Ridgewood, NJ and only covers Bergen County, Passaic County, Rockland County, New York and surrounding areas so I recommended that she contact the national organization of care managers, www.caremanager.org . Some of the things that I recommended she look for are nurses or social workers as care managers, special credentials like care manager certified, and 24/7 emergency service. I also recommended that she talk to a few practices since it’s really best to establish a relationship with one care manager; that person should become like another family member to you so you want to make sure you hire the best person first. I reviewed a website for her and was glad to see that they provided assessments and personalized care plans. A good care manager should act as an advocate if a loved one enters a hospital or nursing home, needs to find another home such as in an assisted living facility or need help from a home health aide. If a care manager is a nurse, s/he can also provide the medical assistance such as medication management and chronic illness management that is so often needed. Since so many older adults experience some form of dementia, training in dementia care is also beneficial.
A geriatric care manager should become like another family member. If you are experiencing a difficult situation with a loved one, call a geriatric care manager now for assistance. Like financial planning, geriatric care planning can make the road a lot less bumpy.
Alzheimer’s Caregivers’ Support Group Continues
December 31, 2009 at 10:00 am | Posted in Pat Linard, PR | Leave a commentTags: alzheimer's, Caregiver's, Support, support group
Distinctive Care of Ridgewood, NJ continues to offer a support group for Bergen and Rockland County residents. The Alzheimer’s Caregivers support group continues on the first Monday of each month at 7PM at the First Presbyterian Church in Ramsey, NJ. In addition to discussion and support, the guest speakers from 2009 included Brian Keane, elder law attorney from Hartman & Winnicki and Amy Matthews from The Alzheimer’s Association; they provided much needed guidance. A guest speaker covering relaxation techniques will be featured in the first quarter of 2010. Mark your calendars for meetings on January 4, February 8 and March 1. Call Barbara at (201) 857-5283 if you would like to attend or want further information.
Meeting the Challenges of Long-Distance Caregiving
September 22, 2009 at 5:54 pm | Posted in Mark Heftler, Admin | Leave a commentTags: Long Distance Caregivers, Support, Tips
This is a wonderful article written by Athan Bezaitis, MA, originally from here.
Skilled professionals and cutting-edge technologies combine to effectively dispatch tasks related to caring for loved ones living far from concerned caregivers.
Overcoming the challenges of caring for an ailing loved one from afar takes organization, teamwork, and a certain amount of trust that tasks will be completed without direct supervision. The process calls for gathering family members, tapping into community support, and dealing with a never-ending line of medical and legal professionals. The goal is to make life as independent and comfortable as possible for the older adult in need while maintaining one’s own sanity at the same time. Fortunately for overwhelmed caregivers who live far away from older adults in their charge, there is someone who can help.
No, it’s not Superman—although the ability to fly at superhuman speeds would certainly come in handy for this job. It’s a geriatric care manager, a professional trained in long-term care with a specialized focus on issues of aging. Minus the cape, the care manager assesses the older adult’s living situation and devises a plan of action for the caregiver that can help make the experience both rewarding and relatively worry free.
Unique Profiles and Problems
Most of the approximately 7 million long-distance caregivers in America are well educated, affluent, and married, according to studies from AARP, MetLife, and the National Council on Aging. Their ages generally range from 46 to 51, with 60% of them being women and just over 20% caring for parents with dementia. “On average, long-distance caregivers live between 300 and 450 miles away and spend about four to seven hours traveling one way to the care recipient,” says Cathy Jo Cress, MSW, an instructor in geriatric home care management at San Francisco State University and the author of Care Managers: Working With the Aging Family.
Regardless of caregivers’ sex or socioeconomic status, distance makes the already difficult job of caring for an ailing loved one even more difficult. The experience of a long-distance caregiver is much different from and usually more complicated than that of a caregiver who lives nearby. “It’s important to know the local resources and services and also to have in place a strong support system to communicate with weekly, to keep good notes, and to join a support group,” says Donna Benton, PhD, director of the Los Angeles Caregiver Resource Center. “Too frequently, long-distance caregivers do not ask for help, do not keep updated lists, and do not have emergency backup plans.” They also face increased costs in travel and time. According to a 2007 study from Evercare, long-distance caregivers spend an average of $8,728 per year on care provision compared with $4,500 to $5,885 for all other caregivers.
On average, these caregivers miss an estimated 20 hours of work per month. Many are forced to arrive late or leave early, miss workdays, rearrange their work schedules, use unpaid leave time, and even resign. “As a long-distance caregiver, it is important to talk to employers about taking time off,” says Peggy McFarland, PhD, LCSW, a geriatric care manager and cofounder of Senior Management Services in Pennsylvania. Several larger companies offer workplace flexibility programs that help deal with the illnesses of family members. In some cases, they even offer counseling to long-distance care providers, but most businesses have neither the resources nor the funding to support caregivers’ circumstances.
The crunch of caregiver demands frequently leads to depression, anxiety, and a feeling of helplessness. Caregiver overload is especially common among the sandwich generation, or those caring for their aging parents along with their own children. “When the long-distance caregiver tends to ailing parents, they feel they are neglecting their family and other responsibilities,” Cress says. “Yet when they tend to their family, spouse, or job, they feel they are neglecting their parents.” A geriatric care manager can help ease this burden by offering counseling or recommending a family counselor.
Care Manager Essentials
The National Association of Professional Geriatric Care Managers Web site (www.caremanager.org) provides a tool for locating care managers. A care locator feature allows users to input a relative’s zip code to find nearby professionals. As for fees, AARP reports the average national geriatric care manager rate is $74 per hour, with a standard charge for an initial consultation of around $175, as well as $168 to develop a care plan. “For a long-distance caregiver, it’s money they feel they have to pay,” McFarland says. “Sometimes family members split the cost to feel secure and make sure their loved ones are taken care of.”
Common needs of long-distance caregivers for which a geriatric care manager can offer support include physical assistance with activities of daily living, companionship, housekeeping help, health updates, and awareness of local services and resources. “The goal is to maximize independence and autonomy for the care recipient while supporting families and caregivers,” says Irene Zelterman, MSW, LCSW, a New York State-certified social worker who specializes in assisting older adults and their families. “We try to keep older people in their homes for as long as possible while continuing to monitor and assess whether this situation is in their best interest.”
The care manager often acts as a family counselor. “You can’t teach aging without teaching family,” Cress says. “Sometimes, you’ll be bringing multiple midlife siblings together for the first time as adults. It helps for them to think of their situation like sand in an hourglass. Even if they’re spread across the country, they have to come together as a team to care for Mom and Dad.”
Seeing their parents as frail and dependent can be especially difficult. “A lot of adult children are so fearful for their parents. Others want to keep them safe without regard for quality of life or personal preferences,” Zelterman says. Such misunderstandings lead to misguided expectations. “Without understanding the system, they’re prone to be driven by fear. No matter what the adult child has told me in advance, I don’t get a true read on the situation until I visit older adults in their homes,” she says.
Assessment and Care Planning
A psychosocial and functional evaluation is an important first step. “Every family needs that first assessment, two hours analyzing the whole situation from healthcare to social needs to safety issues,” McFarland says. The appraisal should provide a clear picture of the situation so that the family can identify and act on all options. “I start with basic demographic information from the family,” Zelterman says. “Then I make a home visit and notice everything. What does it look like on the outside? Is it being kept up? If it’s an apartment, are there stairs in the lobby? Is it wheelchair accessible?” Sometimes, just getting through the front door can be a major obstacle.
Once the assessment is completed, the care manager can help organize the family by divvying up responsibilities. “The more open the family, the better,” Zelterman says. One sibling can pay bills. Another can organize paperwork. There can be more than one long-distance care provider, each of whom is responsible for different tasks. “If there’s more than one family member, it’s nice if they can put a routine into place,” McFarland says. “For example, the brother calls Mom on Mondays and Thursdays, then the sister talks to her on Tuesdays and Sundays. You can set up a system so that the ailing parent knows who will be calling and when. Visits can also be organized and spaced out this way.”
Taking Precautionary Action
Precautionary measures help to establish a plan of action and build a network of support. “I try to encourage families to prepare for emergencies before they ever happen,” McFarland says. This means investigating available resources such as hospitals, skilled nursing care, rehabilitation centers, assisted living facilities, and respite and home care. It also entails identifying the caregiving team, both the local and long-distance members.
In Care Managers, Cress includes a chart that divides important preventive measures into four categories: legal-financial tasks, medical tasks, social-familial tasks, and spiritual-emotional tasks.
Legal-financial tasks include the preparation of personal documents, such as a will, joint ownership, a trust, durable power of attorney, preferred possession list, and advanced directives, including healthcare proxy, do-not-resuscitate orders, and a living will. Medical tasks consist of developing lists of healthcare providers and telephone numbers, current medications and medical records, and local emergency service providers. Social-familial tasks involve convening a family conference to formulate plans; obtaining the phone numbers, names, addresses, and e-mail addresses of three people who live near the care recipient; and discussing the possibility of a panic button service. Spiritual-emotional tasks include identifying wishes for funeral and burial or cremation and establishing a point of contact with at least one member of a preferred religious institution.
Cress recommends making a binder and putting all documents into a safe deposit box. She suggests making copies and converting them into an electronic format that can be available at a shared site where family members can access the information. “There are several online sites which allow for the aggregation of this information that can be accessed from anywhere,” Benton says. ElderIssues’ LifeLedger is a secure way to record and store health records, financial information, and medication history. Microsoft’s HealthVault offers similar organizational features at no cost, with guaranteed privacy. “It is important to look at them and find the one that best suits your needs,” Benton says.
On-Location Monitoring
According to the Handbook of Geriatric Care Management, also coauthored by Cress, a geriatric care manager provides important monitoring services on behalf of the long-distance caregiver. Responsibilities in this capacity include checkups on care recipients that assess how their needs have changed; accompanying clients to appointments for medical, financial, or legal support; arranging for transportation; hiring and supervising care staff; providing status reports; and being on call in case of an emergency. McFarland works with families who have even hired her to check on loved ones residing in nursing homes. “Some clients appreciate that I stop by once a month to make sure their parents are being cared for,” she says. She predicts that the observational role of geriatric care managers will expand as the aging population continues to grow in number and as adult children’s careers more frequently force them to relocate.
Care managers can also help plan visits with older adults. Cress recommends considering important questions about the purpose of each trip, such as will this visit be for information collecting, and how long should the visit be? Cress warns against swooping, which, she says, occurs when an adult child visits with the good intention of making up for lost time but interferes with the planned responsibilities of the primary caregiver. Often, she notes, a geriatric care manager can help to avoid swooping by identifying high-priority issues and helping clients concentrate on spending quality time with their parents.
By plugging the long-distance caregiver into a network of nationwide elder transitional businesses, the care manager can also play a role in the decision to relocate an elder. For interstate moves, the company in the state that does the hiring coordinates with a specialized elder moving company on the destination end that does the unpacking; some even go so far as to stock food in the refrigerator.
Technology’s Essential Role
Family meetings help geriatric care managers maintain communication. Their main purpose, Cress says, is to discern which relatives will provide what types of support. Beyond the conference call, a variety of accessible Web-based technologies are available to assist with these gatherings. Several companies provide virtual Web meeting places for friends and family such as CarePages and CaringBridge. Affordable computer-based video conferencing is also available through services such as Skype.
To overcome the feelings of isolation that many older adults face, Jitterbug offers easy-to-use cell phones that feature large screens with bright text. Other clever gadgets encourage technologically enhanced communications without the necessity for a computer. Presto allows for the exchange of e-mails and photographs using the Presto Printer. Celery offers a similar tool that allows users to send and receive e-mail through any fax machine. Also available are CEIVA digital photo frames that allow the uploading of digital images from anywhere in the world.
For varying situations, different technologies may be appropriate. Zelterman uses simple contraptions such as a mat that rings in order to prevent wandering or a baby monitor to help keep watch over older adults’ movements at night. More advanced digital equipment allows for the supervision of home environments and provides assistance with medication management, as well as with healthcare monitoring. Cress advises care managers to assist with system design, installation, and oversight of new technologies.
Residential monitoring systems utilize wireless motion detectors and cameras that track movements within the home. The Internet provides a centralized information hub. Currently available products include Rest Assured, Xanboo, AT&T Remote Monitor, QuietCare, and GrandCare. These systems provide reports and allow for virtual visitation, personal video conferencing, and emergency preparedness. Other common tools are personal emergency response systems such as Philips Lifeline, through which a distress signal is released at the touch of a button, sending an urgent message to a 24-hour response center.
Home telehealth systems, such as Health Hero’s iCare Health Buddy appliance, ask a series of questions about users’ vital signs, symptoms, and behaviors. The systems send responses to a secure data center where medical professionals have authorized access. The e-pill company offers medication reminders, including electronic pill timers and pill organizers, vibrating watches, countdown timers, and automatic pill dispensers. Even the toilet can be used as an intelligent telehealth system. And the Japanese corporation Toto has developed a toilet that analyzes blood sugar levels, body weight, and fat percentage and also features a blood pressure cuff. Despite the costs of innovative technology, keeping older adults in their homes is still generally less expensive than placement in nursing homes.
An Arsenal of Resources
“Home is where they want to be, and the quality of their life will be so much better,” Zelterman says of older adults. “It’s all about aging in place,” Cress adds.
For family members who want to be assured their loved ones are well situated, care managers can provide peace of mind in a time of need. They may not be faster than a speeding bullet or capable of leaping tall buildings in a single bound, but they have an ample supply of resources at their disposal that make them real-life problem solvers.
— Athan Bezaitis, MA, is a freelance writer based in southern California.
Alzheimer’s Medications
March 25, 2009 at 7:58 am | Posted in Sophia Heftler, GCM | Leave a commentTags: Alzheimer's Disease, GCM, Medication, Support
There are currently four medications that are FDA approved for the treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease. These drugs are:
Aricept, Exelon, Namenda, and Razadyne.
The first question that may come to mind when considering the use of one of these medications is, “Which works best?” The American College of Physicians advises that there is little evidence that one of these drugs works better than the others. They point out that the real differences between these medications include cost, possible adverse reactions, and how easy it is for the medication to be taken. If the drug needs to be taken several times a day it may be to complicated or difficult to manage; particulary if the person with the disease has a difficult time taking medications.
So instead of asking, “Which works best”, the care managers at Distinctive Care recommend that the following questions be asked when discussing a medication regime with the physician:
- Which medication will be the safest when taken with the other medications my loved one is taking?
- Which medication has the lowest risks of side effects based on my loved one’s medical status?
- What adverse reactions should I look for at home, what should I notify you about and when should I notify you?
- What form does the medication come in (pill, liquid or skin patch)? How often shoulf the medication be taken? When should the medication be taken? Are there any special instructions I will need to remember, for example should it be taken with food or on an empty stomach?
- How long will it take to know if the medication is working? If the medication does work might there be a time when it will stop working and it will become necessary to stop taking the medication?
- How much do these medications cost? Will it be covered by our insurance? And do not be afraid to ask for samples to see if the medication is effective for your loved one before spending the money to have the prescription filled!
After reviewing these questions with your loved one’s physician you will be better prepared to make a collaborative decision with the physician that is in the best interest of your loved one.
If you would like to find out more about what to ask at a doctor appointment contact us in our Ridgewood, NJ office at 201-587-5283.
Second Quarter Newsletter
March 16, 2009 at 8:46 am | Posted in Mark Heftler, Admin | Leave a commentTags: News, Support
The first quarter is quickly ending, and that means a busy time for Distinctive Care. Beside the typical paperwork and accounting, important number tracking and things of that nature, we’re very excited to be wrapping up our second newsletter. We’ve received a great deal of positive feedback from our first newsletter, which went out the beginning of January, and we’re hoping to keep our friends and contacts equally as happy and informed as we’ve done in the past.
If you’re interested in signing up for the newsletter, I encourage you to head over to our website. Just drop your information in the sign-up box, and we’ll get our Medicare guide right out to you, along with our quarterly newsletters and anything else we find newsworthy and important.
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