22000 in Lee County live with Alzheimer?s The News-Press, FL - Forgetting recently learned information is one of the most common early signs of dementia. A person begins to forget more often and is unable to recall the ...
Drugs often a shortcut for care Pioneer Press, MN - Nov 29, 2008 There are understaffed nursing homes that need to protect workers from residents whose dementia is causing them to lash out or resist care. ...
Often fatal, many falls also are preventable Pioneer Press, MN - With dementia taking its toll, Fleischer moved to the Anoka Care Center, where she used a wheelchair. Confused and suffering from pneumonia on Nov. ...
Caregiver writes of hard, rewarding role WTOP, DC - Nov 30, 2008 While caring for another person is hard work, the rewards outweigh the burdens, as Kennedy wrote in her essay. "My biggest reward at the end of each day is ...
Support available for people with dementia Tampa Bay Newspapers, FL - Nov 26, 2008 Another person, known as Eldon, 69, of Clearwater said he, too, wanted a baseline for his memory. Dementia does not run in his family, he said, and although ...
Markey & Smith: Health care faces a perfect storm MetroWest Daily News, MA - Nov 29, 2008 Today, the estimated national tab for caring for individuals with dementia is $100 billion a year. That amount will skyrocket as the number of Americans ...
New kinds of high-tech homes for the elderly San Jose Mercury News, USA - (A special computer designed with help from the UCLA Center on Aging offers memory exercises to ward off dementia.) Or picture in-home blood pressure checks ...
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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: dementia + caring + care Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)
Avoid baby talk in dementia care Nursing Times, UK - Aug 6, 2008 Nurses should refrain from using baby talk with patients who have Alzheimer's disease as it leads to less cooperation over treatment and care, a US study ...
To Be Old, Frail Wall Street Journal - In recent years, assisted-living facilities have sprung up as alternatives for those who don't quite require nursing-home care but want or need assistance ...
More money is a healthy start New York Daily News, NY - We live in a city where 30000 home health workers care for the elderly, sick and dying with skill and compassion every day - but must fear for their own ...
Can hypnosis help to slow dementia? Craegmoor News, UK - Evidence suggests therefore, that effective methods of care for those with dementia may not be confined to those of the "mainstream", meaning moving forward ...
Councillors' bid to save Coventry care homes Coventry Telegraph, UK - THREE councillors are to challenge a decision to close council care homes for elderly people and dementia sufferers in Coventry. Socialists Dave Nellist and ...
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[BOOK]Practical Dementia Care - PV Rabins - 2004 - internurse.com ... such minor mistakes, however, Practical DementiaCare remains a comprehensive and
useful book, both for those suffering from dementia and those caring for and ...
Informal Costs of Dementia Care Estimates From the National Longitudinal Caregiver Study - MJ Moore, CW Zhu, EC Clipp - Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and …, 2001 - Geron Soc America ... The purpose of the study was to examine on a national level the informal costs of caring for elderly com- munity-dwelling male veterans with dementia by female ...
[PDF]The extent and impact of dementia care: Unique challenges experienced by family caregivers - MG Ory, JL Yee, SL Tennstedt, R Schulz - Handbook on dementia caregiving: Evidence-based …, 2000 - aoa.gov ... M = 46.26 v. M = 42.99) and dementia caregivers were caring for recipients that
were significantly older than nondementia caregivers caregivers (M = 78.39 v. M ...
Diagnosing dementia: perspectives of primary care physicians - L Boise - The Gerontologist, 1999 - Geron Soc America ... Home page, Journal of Family Nursing Home page CS Teel and P. Carson Family Experiences
in the Journey Through Dementia Diagnosis and Care Journal of Family ...
Enabling and empowering certified nursing assistants for quality dementia care - C Beck, A Ortigara, S Mercer, V Shue - International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 1999 - doi.wiley.com ...DEMENTIACARE... They stated that sta? should demon- strate dementia-capable skills
and knowledge before caring for residents with dementia. ...
Caring for an elderly person: predictors of burden in dementia care M GRAFSTR?M, L FRATIGLIONI, B WINBLAD - International journal of geriatric psychiatry, 1994 - cat.inist.fr Caring for an elderly person: predictors of burden in dementiacare. M
GRAFSTR?M, L FRATIGLIONI, B WINBLAD International journal ...
Care management, dementia care and specialist mental health services: an evaluation - D Challis, R von Abendorff, P Brown, J Chesterman, … - International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 2002 - doi.wiley.com ...Care management, dementiacare and specialist mental health services: an evaluation ... care management, dementiacare and specialist mental health services 317 ...
Caring for a person with dementia is hard work. Not only are caregivers watching a loved one decline, they are bathing them, feeding them and otherwise meeting their personal needs. While a long-term care facility may be a good solution for an exhausted caregiver, new research suggests that the depression and anxiety associated with caring for a relative with dementia does not ease up after caregivers place their relative in a nursing home or other long-term care facility.
"We expected that since much of the stress of caregiving, particularly for dementia patients, has to do with the hard work of providing care and being vigilant, sometimes 24 hours a day, we would see some recovery among caregivers when these stressors were removed, but we didn’t see this." says lead author Richard Schulz, PhD, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.
The study, published in the August 25th issue of The Journal the American Medical Association (JAMA), was part of a larger four-year study involving 1,222 pairs of caregivers and patients with Alzheimer’s disease. Previously, researchers reported that caregivers whose relatives passed away recovered remarkably well. In this study, the investigators looked at the health and well being of 180 caregivers during the in-home experience and after they placed their relatives in a nursing home. After following these participants for 18 months, they found that those who institutionalized their relatives were just as depressed and anxious after placement as they were when they were in-home caregivers.
Caregivers at Highest Risk
The transition to a nursing home was hardest for spouses, as opposed to the children of relatives in a nursing home. About half of the spouses tended to visit daily and continued to provide care, such as helping with eating and dressing. New stressors also cropped up, such as advocating for better care for the patient by working with the nursing home staff and administration. For some, the added burdens of traveling to the facility every day and the cost of care were additional stressors. Caregivers with inadequate support from friends and family also experienced more emotional turmoil, as did people who had found caregiving rewarding.
"When you look at at-home caregiving, people report that it’s highly burdensome but at the same time they’ll tell you that they get something positive out of it." Dr. Schulz says. The people who found the most meaning in caregiving and who were the most strongly attached to their relative had the most difficult transitions.
Predictably, guilt was also a problem. "There is a universal consensus that being institutionalized is something to be feared and dreaded, and family members don’t want to do it." Dr. Schulz says. "Spouses, in particular, feel that they’ve abandoned or failed their relatives in some way."
Coping with the Transition
The researchers concluded that caregivers need to be treated for their emotional distress with counseling, support groups and/or antidepressant and anti-anxiety mediation. They also need education about how nursing homes work, so that they can figure out a role for themselves, especially if they enjoyed providing direct care. And because their relatives are likely to die in the nursing home, caregivers should work with the nursing home staff on end-of-life planning, which will help them later with the bereavement process.
"We tend to forget about caregivers after the person goes into a nursing home, but we need to make sure they are supported." Dr. Schulz says.