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Listening to Overlooked Caregivers

What do family caregivers want? What do they need? Education and training. Respite care. And, most important, peer support. Those are the conclusions of the HSC Foundation, which, along with several partners, organized a series of 2009 listening session to hear what caregivers had to say. They were not necessarily caregivers of parents or other frail elderly family members, Some were caring for wounded vets, others [...]

By |2010-08-25T09:15:06-04:00August 25th, 2010|Uncategorized|3 Comments

Study: Palliative Care Improves Length and Quality of Life

An important new study finds that patients with metastatic lung cancer who received early palliative care both lived longer and reported a better quality of life than similar patients who had only standard cancer treatment.  Palliative care focuses on treating symptoms, although, unlike hospice, patients may still receive treatment for their terminal disease if they wish. Palliative care also coordinates [...]

By |2010-08-19T19:14:00-04:00August 19th, 2010|End of life|0 Comments

Alzheimer’s Screening and Long Term Care Insurance

What will our growing ability to identify Alzheimer's Disease years before a patient shows full symptoms mean for the U.S. system of voluntary long-term care insurance? The New York Times reported this week that a new test using spinal fluid can accurately identify Alzheimer's a decade before it becomes full-blown. With some patient groups, the technique--which is already commercially available--can identify future onset of the [...]

By |2010-08-11T15:13:39-04:00August 11th, 2010|long-term care insurance|0 Comments

A New Picture of An Aging Population

The Stanford University Center on Longevity has just released a trove of information on the health, living arrangements, and demographics of an aging America. The study, "New Realities of an Older America" tells the story of an independent, remarkably healthy population, but one that will present unique challenges as it lives well into its 80s and, eventually, reaches frail old age. For example, authors Adele Hayutin, [...]

By |2010-08-03T19:15:29-04:00August 3rd, 2010|Aging, Senior housing|0 Comments

The Heritage Foundation is Wrong About the CLASS Act

In a Washington Times column yesterday, two Heritage Foundation researchers argued that the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports (CLASS) Act is a trillion dollar government bailout waiting to happen. The CLASS Act is a national voluntary long-term care insurance program that was included in the new health care law. And to listen to the authors, you'd think CLASS will [...]

The New York Times, Dementia, and Home Care

I was fascinated by both Dale Russakoff's recent New York Times blog post on dementia care and the reader comments her article generated. Dale's piece was a list of tips on how to care for a person with Alzheimer's and similar diseases. Many were sensible enough, but they didn't begin to describe how difficult it can be to care for a dementia patient. The real lesson is a simple, but painful, [...]

By |2010-07-26T11:01:54-04:00July 26th, 2010|Uncategorized|0 Comments

Senate Panel Examines Continuing Care Retirement Communities

The Senate Aging Committee held an important hearing today on Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs) where the panel's chairman, Senator Herb Kohl (D-WI), urged that both state regulators and the CCRCs themselves provide more information about their financial risks to residents, as well as other consumer protections. This is what Kohl said: The fact is that while CCRCs are a good residential option [...]

By |2010-07-21T19:55:02-04:00July 21st, 2010|Senior housing|0 Comments

The Importance of Early Dementia Diagnosis

The other day, I had a long talk with a friend about her mom. My friend lives on the East Coast. Her mother lives in the Midwest. Mom is in an independent living apartment and recently has been falling and suffering memory lapses. The other day, mom got lost trying to drive home from her regular bridge game.   My friend realizes it is time for her mother to [...]

By |2010-07-15T18:39:30-04:00July 15th, 2010|Caregiver tips, dementia, family caregivers|0 Comments

Obama’s Choice to Run Medicaid and Medicare

Kudos to President Obama for making a "recess appointment" of Don Berwick to run the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Berwick may be the ideal choice for the job. He is the right candidate at exactly the right time. The new health law makes possible broad reforms in the way we deliver health and long-term care. But it by no [...]

Does Active Caregiving Reduce Emotional Stress?

We all know how tough it is to be a family caregiver. The physical, financial, and emotional strains have been well documented for years. And those of us who have cared for a family member hardly need research to describe these pressures. But a new study suggests active caregiving, as opposed to the role of passively sitting and waiting for a problem to occur, [...]

By |2010-07-02T14:21:59-04:00July 2nd, 2010|family caregivers|0 Comments