Living Well Blog

‘Uncategorized’ Posts

Technology Can Help Track “Wanderers” with Dementia

Monday, May 10th, 2010

High Tech - High Touch to keep seniors safe at homeThe need for special training and smart technology to help track the rising number of people with dementia who wanders beyond logic patterns was raised in a recent article by Kirk Johnson in The New York Times, Johnson explains that “…For generations, the prototypical search-and-rescue case in America was Timmy in the well, with Lassie barking insistently to summon help. Lost children and adolescents — from the woods to the mall — generally outnumbered all others…But last year for the first time, another type of search crossed into first place here in Virginia, marking a profound demographic shift that public safety officials say will increasingly define the future as the nation ages: wandering, confused…” Read more

Living Well Assisted Living at Home, Inc. proposes combining smart technology with specialized services can help to keep these people safe at home. Models like the one they called High Tech-High Touch offers a solution to the challenge of caring for elders who experience any type of dementia or cognitive decline and want to stay at home instead of going to an institution.

LGBT Senior Citizens Get a Hearing at the US Congress

Friday, April 23rd, 2010
Living Well as a Gay Senior

Living Well as a LGBT Senior

A hearing in Congress on Thursday will address issues surrounding LGBT senior citizens, according to the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force.

Rea Carey, executive director of the Task Force, said in a press release that the oldest LGBT people are often “invisible to many of us and ignored by most institutions in our society.” She added, “We know that invisibility leads to greater social isolation, which can lead to increased vulnerability in many areas. We also know that discrimination across the lifespan leaves LGBT people economically and socially vulnerable as they age. There are many challenges but we also have concrete recommendations on how aging advocates, policy makers and social service agencies can meet them.” Michelle Garcia wrote for The Advocate. Read the whole article

How to Outsmart Alzheimer’s

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

How to Outsmart Alzheimer'sWe wanted to share a wonderful article and video by Amy Dockser Marcus in The Wall Street Journal.

We at Living Well Assisted Living at Home, Inc welcome initiatives and information like this that supports the latest research on Dementia and can give hope and tolls to family members and professional caregivers.

Amy writes, “…Doctors frustrated by a lack of a cure, or even an effective treatment, for Alzheimer’s disease are trying a new approach: preventing the disease altogether.

A new project, the Cognitive Fitness and Innovative Therapies, or CFIT, is trying to keep people at risk for Alzheimer’s intellectually and physically fit with quizzes and other cognitive challenges to see if onset of the disease can be delayed, perhaps indefinitely. The program, which is being advised by many famous names in Alzheimer’s research and treatment, also promotes diet changes and maintaining a social life to try to slow cognitive decline and lower the risk for Alzheimer’s.

Read the article.

Watch the video

Bay Area House Call Dentists, A Living Well Partner in the News

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Judy Richter,  wrote, special to The San Francisco Chronicle, a story on Monday, March 29, 2010, on how Bay Area House Call dentists work.

Bay Area House Call Dentists is a division of The Blende Dental Group. They start with respect and consideration, two important values at Living Well Assisted Living at Home, when handling the health and wellness of our members. They make regular dental care an important priority and offer house calls for dental patients with special needs who can’t easily get to a dental office, including patients with physical disabilities, emotional issues or phobias (some are so afraid of dentistry they need to be sedated for any kind of procedure).

Judy says  on her article”…Debbie Green’s 92-year-old aunt lost a front tooth, she needed a dentist. But Green knew getting her to one wouldn’t be easy.

For one thing, Green lives in Aptos (Santa Cruz County), and her aunt, Jean Christian, lives at Sunrise of San Mateo, a continuing care facility for seniors.

So Christian didn’t go to the dentist. The dentist went to her. A team from Bay Area House Call Dentists went to her apartment, evaluated her dental health and took X-rays. They discovered that besides a new tooth, she needed root canals and a crown – “a huge reconstruction of her teeth,” Green said.

Because she needed so much work, Bay Area House Call Dentists arranged transportation to its office in San Francisco, where all the work was done in about four hours. After a follow-up visit, “she did fine,” Green said. “She liked the people. They kept us informed.” Read the full article

Listen to the Facts and to Living Well partners

More on the Issues of Aging LGBT: Improving their Lives

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

A new report available from MAP and SAGE, Improving the Lives of LGBT Older Adults, shows that contrary to stereotypes, LGBT elders are more likely to live in poverty, face social and community isolation, and lack appropriate health care and long-term care. The report examines the unique barriers and disparities faced by LGBT elders. It also offers detailed and practical solutions, providing a roadmap for LGBT and aging advocates, policymakers, and anyone interested in ensuring that all Americans have the opportunity to age with dignity and respect.

The report states that although largely invisible until very recently, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) older adults make up a significant (and growing) share of both the overall LGBT population and the larger 65+ population. While confronted with the same challenges that face all people as they age, LGBT elders also face an array of unique barriers and inequalities that can stand in the way of a healthy and rewarding later life. The additional challenges to successful aging faced by LGBT elders are gaining visibility with the aging of LGBT Baby Boomers, who are the first generation of LGBT people to have lived openly gay or transgender lives in large numbers.

The report examines three areas of particular difficulty for LGBT elders:

  1. LGBT elders are less financially secure. LGBT older adults are poorer and less financially secure than American elders as a whole due to a lifetime of discrimination compounded by major laws and safety net programs that fail to protect and support LGBT elders equally with their heterosexual peers. The report examines the following key programs and their impacts: Social Security, Medicaid and long-term care, tax-qualified retirement plans, employee pensions, retiree health insurance benefits, estate taxes, veterans’ benefits, and inheritance laws.
  2. LGBT elders find it more difficult to achieve good health and healthcare. The report examines major reasons for this, including: LGBT elders’ health disparities are overlooked; there is limited government support for the families and partners of LGBT elders; health care environments often are inhospitable to LGBT elders; nursing homes often fail to protect LGBT elders; and visitation policies and medical decision-making laws often exclude the families and partners of LGBT elders.
  3. LGBT elders are more likely to face social isolation. Despite a high level of resilience and strong friendship networks, social isolation has still been found to be higher among LGBT older adults. In addition to being more likely to live alone, LGBT elders also are more likely to feel unwelcome in, or be unwelcome in, mainstream aging programs such as senior centers and volunteer centers. They also often lack support from, and feel unwelcome in, the broader LGBT community. Finally, housing discrimination adds to the challenges LGBT elders face in connecting to their communities and may separate LGBT elders from loved friends or partners.

In addition to examining the challenges faced by LGBT elders, the report also provides detailed and comprehensive policy analysis and recommendations. Read the report.

Aging Issues for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Liivng Well...Out and Aging!

Out and Aging is the name of the report issued by the MetLife Mature Market Institute, in partnership with the Lesbian and Gay Aging Issues Network of the American Society on Aging. A sample of 1,000 self-identified LGBT people ages 40 to 61 participated in an online survey conducted by Zogby International, a leading polling and public-opinion research firm.* The snapshot of LGBT baby boomers that emerges from the survey raises important questions for the wide range of professionals who work with older adults, employers, policymakers, and everyone interested in ensuring dignity, independence and the highest possible quality of life for the boomer generation as it reaches midlife and old age.

As they plan for retirement and for their eventual long-term care and end-of-life needs, LGBT baby boomers share in the hopes and experiences that characterize the largest generation in American history. At the same time, however, they reflect certain unique family structures and gender role differences— and they confront distinct concerns about caregiving, social support networks, retirement and end-of-life planning.

The findings in this study not only offer a snapshot of a population never before studied on a national scale, they also bring to the fore a number of practical implications for LGBT boomers, for their loved ones, for their employers, and for professionals and organizations working with them. Read the report with interest and pride!

We need to understand the new paradigm: Technology will help us to age in place!

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

As Baby Boomers retire, companies as varied as GE, Philips, and Nintendo are working on technology that helps seniors stay at home and remain independent. You will see that companies tell you that Staying Healthy and Safe, at Home is possible.

“…Why spend precious years in a nursing home or assisted living facility when you could remain healthy, comfortable, and safe in your own home? Technology giants such as Intel (INTC), General Electric (GE), Philips Electronics, and Honeywell (HON) are finally starting to deliver on the age-old dream of a “smart home” that can watch over its elderly occupant, spot signs of trouble, alert doctors, and even teleconference physicians into the living room when there is a problem. In just one instance of companies hoping to cash in on so-called aging-in-place technology, GE and Intel are committing $250 million over five years to develop products. Consultancy Aging in Place Technology Watch predicts that the market for home monitoring and communications devices could eventually generate $20 billion a year.

Read the different ideas from different technology companies at:

Liivng Well

Liivng Well

http://www.businessweek.com/technology/special_reports/20090922aging_in_place.htm