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Senior Residences
How to
Choose
Getting older is a fact of life. But how and where you do it is not. There are a
variety of aging services available to you or your loved one to help them stay
at home, meet new people, take part in activities and most important, live an
enriching and fulfilling life.
This article covers many of these services. The brief descriptions accompanying
each category can help you figure out what's right for you or your loved one.
Keep in mind that planning and saving are two critical parts of helping an older
adult receive the services they need, when they need them, in a place they can
call home.
Home and Community-based Services
Like most people, you probably want to stay in your home for as long as
possible. But you may also need help and support to stay there. That's where
Home and Community-based services (HCBS) can help you. HCBS providers can offer
everything from help with the chores to health care services, or even just
someone to call and check in on you. Also, if you are taking care of a family
member or friend, these services can give you the help and support that you need
as well.
While there are many different services available, not every community has them.
Check with your local area agency on aging for what services are in your area.
Some of these services include:
- Adult Day Care: Provides a variety of health, social
and related support services in a safe setting during the day. Some day care
programs are designed especially for people with Alzheimer's disease.
- Care Managers: Helps people figure out what services
are needed and what services. Together, managers and their clients come up
with a care plan that best fits an individual's lifestyle and arranges the
services.
- Congregate Meal Programs: Offer free or low-cost meals
in group settings (often in a senior center or senior housing).
- Financial Counseling Programs: Help an individual
balance a checkbook, file taxes and pay bills. They also help with Medicaid,
Medicare or other insurance forms.
- Friendly Visiting: Provides volunteers who will come to
visit and talk in a person's home.
- Home Health Care Services: Includes part-time nursing
services, personal care, help with chores, medical supplies or equipment and
different kinds of therapies (physical, occupational, and speech) to help a
person recover from an illness or surgery.
- Homemaker or Chore Services: Helps with different
chores around the house, such as cleaning, preparing meals or doing laundry.
They also help with harder tasks such as washing floors, windows and walls
and shoveling snow.
- Hospice Care: Provides comfort, nursing care and other
services, such as grief counseling, to people who are dying (and their
families). Hospice care is provided in your home, in a nursing facility or
in a free-standing hospice.
- Home-Delivered Meals: Bring meals in to individuals if
they cannot prepare them on their own.
- Information and Assistance Services: Offer information
about services and resources in the area.
- Personal Care Services: Provide help with things like
bathing and dressing.
- Respite Care: Gives families a break from caring for
older people who are unable to care for themselves. Respite care can take
place in the older person's or caregiver's home.
- Rehabilitation services: Offer different kinds of
therapies (physical, occupational, and speech) to help a person recover from
an illness or surgery.
- Senior Centers: Provide a place where people can come
together for social and recreational activities.
- Telephone Reassurance: Provides a daily call and check
on someone on a regular basis.
- Transportation Services: Helps people get to and from
shopping centers, doctor's appointments, senior centers and other places.
Senior Housing
You may want to think about senior housing if you want to live on your own, but
don't want to have all the chores that go along with having a home. It's also a
great option for people who want to live in a community with other seniors.
Depending on the community you choose, you can rent an apartment either at the
market rate or if your income level applies, a lower rate. They are often
specially designed with things like railings in bathrooms or power outlets
higher up on the wall. They may also offer a 24-hour emergency call service if
residents need help right away. Some places may also offer different kinds of
services to the people who live there like meals, transportation, social
activities and other programs.
Continuing Care Retirement Communities
Continuing care retirement communities, or CCRCs, offer a few types of services
- all in one location, which gives a person the chance to stay in one place if
even his or her needs change. CCRCs offer a range of services including nursing
and other health services; meals; housekeeping; transportation; emergency help;
and personal care. They also usually have lots of social and educational
activities on site.
CCRCs are also different from other types of housing options for older people
because they offer you a contract that says the CCRC will provide you with
housing and services for life. Most CCRCs require a one-time entrance fee and
then monthly payments thereafter. These fees vary by community, depending on the
type of housing and services they offer. Other CCRCs operate on a rental basis,
in which you would make monthly payments, but would not have to pay an entrance
fee.
Assisted Living
If a person needs some help every day, but not constant nursing care, assisted
living may be a good choice. Assisted living residences provide help with the
things people need to do every day, such as bathing or getting dressed, taking
medicine, cooking, shopping, housekeeping, laundry and getting around. But, they
do all of this while still giving a person the chance to stay active and control
your own life.
Assisted living facilities may be part of a retirement community or nursing
home, or they may stand alone. They offer single or double rooms, or sometimes
even suites or apartments, depending on a person's needs and how much he or she
can afford.
Nursing Homes
Nursing homes offer round-the-clock care if someone is too sick to live on their
own, or if they need to recover after having an illness or operation. Some
people stay for a short time in a nursing home and then go home. Other people
may be sicker and need more care for longer.
Nursing homes are licensed by the state to provide nursing care, personal care
and medical services. They also offer different kinds of therapies to help a
person recover after an illness or surgery. They provide meals, and do your
laundry and housekeeping. Finally, nursing homes offer different kinds of
activities like art classes and religious services to help residents socialize
and make it a place they can call home.
There are so many options, but it's up to you to decide how much you give to
pick one for you or a loved one.
This article comes from:
American
Association of Homes and Services for the Aging
a non-profit organization. AAHSA's commitment is to create the
future of aging services through quality people can trust. Please visit their
website for more information.
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In
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Feeling tired all the time?
You’re not alone. In fact, fatigue is one of the most
common complaints that bring adults to doctors’ offices.
Numerous studies indicate that people who see their doctor
about fatigue have generally experienced it for a
considerable length of time — anywhere from six months to
several years!
Fatigue can be due to numerous causes, such as medical
conditions like congestive heart failure, hypothyroidism or
diabetes. It can also be a result of sleep disturbances
brought on by menopause, or by physical changes that
accompany aging. But while fatigue may be an inescapable
part of life, there’s no need to take it lying down. Your
body is geared toward generating energy as well as expending
it. And there are numerous strategies to help regain the
physical and mental energy needed to enjoy life to its
fullest.
Eat for energy
The tried-and-true advice
for healthful eating also applies to keeping your energy
level high:
• Eat a balanced
diet that includes a variety of carbohydrates,
proteins, and fats with an emphasis on vegetables, whole
grains, and healthy oils. Taking a daily multivitamin will
ensure that you get the vitamins and minerals you need, but
taking extra amounts of individual nutrients won’t give you
more energy.
• Eating certain
types of foods in particular amounts can help
prevent fatigue. Because different kinds of foods are
converted to energy at different rates, some — such as candy
and other simple sugars — can give you a quick lift, while
others — such as whole grains and healthy unsaturated fats —
supply the reserves you’ll need to draw on throughout the
day.
• Eat small,
frequent meals. Where energy is the issue, it’s
better to eat small meals and snacks every few hours than
three large meals a day. This approach can reduce your
perception of fatigue because your brain, which has very few
energy reserves of its own, needs a steady supply.
Reduce stress
The most common cause of
persistent fatigue is stress and the emotional response to
it. People who feel fatigued most of the time don’t
necessarily have more stress in their lives than other
people, but they may be more sensitive to its effects.
Stress-induced emotions consume huge amounts of energy.
Relaxation therapy can be an effective tool for reducing
stress and naturally boosting your energy, particularly when
used in combination with cognitive behavioral therapy.
Meditation, self-hypnosis, yoga, and tai chi are all
relaxation techniques. One of the easiest techniques to use
is progressive muscle relaxation, which involves
systematically tightening and releasing sets of muscles,
beginning with your toes and progressing up your legs,
torso, hands, and arms. You might also consider other
relaxation therapies, including aromatherapy and massage.
No
matter what age you are, there are things that you can do to
feel more energetic. Harvard Health Publications’
Boosting Your Energy report will help you take the
first steps toward discovering the causes of your fatigue.
This Special Health Report provides you with the latest
information about fatigue and offers strategies to help you
regain your physical and mental energy. The report discusses
medical conditions that may be the cause of your fatigue as
well as ways to naturally boost your energy.
Reprinted from Boosting Your Energy
— A Special Health Report from Harvard Medical School,
Copyright © 2007 by the President and Fellows of Harvard
College. All rights reserved. |
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