How dementia makes it harder to offer end-of-life comfort

Pauline Finster, who barely speaks anymore, is receiving hospice care at an assisted-living facility. Meanwhile, gangrene is spreading across her right foot.
Pauline Finster, who barely speaks anymore, is receiving hospice care at an assisted-living facility. Meanwhile, gangrene is spreading across her right foot.

By Rachel Bluth

Dementia took over Pauline Finster’s 91-year-old mind long ago, and she may die without having another real conversation with her daughter.

After Finster broke her hip in July 2015, Jackie Mantua noticed her mother’s speech ebbing until she said only “hi” or that she felt fine. Mantua last heard Finster speak six months ago.

Finster’s hip surgery led to a series of medical interventions that left her with poor circulation in her legs. Then gangrene set in. Mantua won’t look at her mother’s right foot, where the dead tissue is creeping from the toes to the heel.

She has instructed the staff at the AlfredHouse assisted-living facility in Rockville, Md., where her mother has been in hospice care since earlier this summer, to keep Finster on Tylenol to curb the gangrene’s discomfort.

Is that enough? It’s really all she can do at this point, Mantua said.

Finster began hospice care at the beginning of the summer. Pictures of her and her husband as a young woman are the last reminders in her room of her life before dementia.
Finster began hospice care at the beginning of the summer. Pictures of her and her husband as a young woman are the last reminders in her room of her life before dementia.

Hospice’s purpose is to ease a dying patient’s pain at the end of life and improve the quality of that life. But what’s to be done when a dementia patient in her waning days can’t communicate about her pain or help identify the cause? Or when that patient resists taking medications?

All those concerns can be troubling for relatives caring for loved ones with dementia and in hospice care, according to a recent study in the American Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease & Other Dementias.

Families often describe a cancer patient’s last months as stressful but meaningful. That isn’t the case with dementia patients because the disease changes the patient’s personality and causes behavior issues, according to George Demiris, one of the study’s authors and a professor of biobehavioral nursing and health systems at the University of Washington’s School of Nursing in Seattle.

Caregivers who took part in the study said they worried that their loved ones were in pain but were unable to properly express it — and that possibility disturbed them, according to interviews with families taking care of dementia patients in their last stage of life.

Multiple participants described feeling frustrated and defeated by patients’ cognitive difficulties and changing emotions, the study reported. Some described the patients as “prisoners” inside their bodies.

Helping a dementia patient in pain can be challenging for hospice workers, too.

Previous research found that patients with dementia were prescribed lower doses of opioids than patients with cancer with similar pain scores.

Other research has found that hospice nurses frequently asked relatives to interpret patients’ “pain signals.” For example, one caregiver knew her mother was in pain when she moved a certain way in her chair. Another recognized that his wife was in pain by observing how she squeezed the hand of a home health-care aide while being given a bath.

Sometimes, patients gasp for air or repeatedly touch the same part of their bodies.

Mantua said she watches her mother’s face and stays vigilant for winces or grimaces. Her face is still expressive, Mantua said. Still, there are no words, only moans to indicate something is wrong.

Recently, Mantua said her mother has been acting “strange.” Instead of her usual vacant but happy smile, Finster looked at her daughter with a “horrified” expression. Mantua told the hospice chaplain that it looked as though her mother had seen the devil.

The cause?

“You have no idea, because she can’t say anything,” Mantua said. “I was saying, ‘What’s wrong? What’s wrong?’ and she’s just looking at me like crazy.”

Finster has had dementia for 10 years. She has spent most of that time in facilities, moving from independent living to assisted living to memory care.

Mantua has felt some of the frustration that other caregivers of patients with dementia experience. Three or four years ago, when Finster still had a phone in her room, she sometimes called her son Les, Mantua’s older brother, 10 times to leave him the same message — that people were coming into her room and stealing her food. She simply forgot that she had called before.

Finster’s years of cognitive decline have taken a toll on Mantua and her family.

“You get to the point you want them to die because it’s hard,” Mantua said. “It’s hard to deal with. It’s a very helpless feeling.”

Now 53, Mantua is the mother of three adult children and the grandmother of twin 5-year-old boys. She said she doesn’t have the patience or natural caretaking abilities to tend to her mother full time.

It comforts her to know that her mother is looked after by a trained staff 24 hours a day, but for families who find themselves as the primary caregivers for dying dementia patients, the job can lead to anxiety, depression and grief, according to the recent study that Demiris helped write.

“Caregivers stated that patients were combative because they could not understand that interventions were meant to help them, or that they forgot about past pain and so rejected attempts at assessment and treatment,” the study said.

For families, a loved one with dementia can become like a stranger who grows angrier and more aggressive than the person they remembered, Demiris said, which “complicates the caregiving experience.”

Finster isn’t aggressive anymore. Mantua remembers when the dementia made her mother paranoid and angry. She was once so combative, the staff at her former assisted-living facility wouldn’t try to feed her unless Mantua or her brother were present.

The decision to begin hospice care wasn’t easy for Mantua or her family. She said it feels as if her mother is already gone.

There isn’t much for Mantua to do when she visits her mother. She chatters as Finster dozes, cradling a baby doll that is always with her. A staff member regularly changes the doll’s clothes, which amuses Mantua.

For now, she keeps driving an hour once every other week from her home on Maryland’s Eastern Shore to Finster’s room in Rockville, where they wait for the end together.

Complete Article HERE!

First step to improving palliative care: change its name

There is a cloud of darkness, misunderstanding, and stigma that surrounds the name palliative care.

The key to helping our patients die with dignity is improving the palliative care we provide, writes Priya Sayal.
The key to helping our patients die with dignity is improving the palliative care we provide, writes Priya Sayal.

By

Somewhere, packed inside a box of childhood memories, is a photo of 3-year-old me. Dressed in child-sized scrubs, beaming, as I grasp my uncle’s hard earned medical degree (my name delicately taped over his). With the right amount of hard work and good fortune, I am two years into medical school and on the brink of my clinical rotations at the University of Toronto Mississauga Academy of Medicine.

I am truly amazed at all the incredible advances that have been made in medicine. People with cancer live longer, women are less likely to die in labour, and robotic surgery is no longer science fiction. Friends and family often ask what the most surprising part of medical training is. They often ask what it’s like to be in an ICU or an OR for the first time, and I always thought that would be the biggest deal for me. But it’s not. What I have been most shocked about is our failure to provide people with a dignified ending of their life.

The public has been galvanized around a conversation about the legalization of medically assisted dying, an incredibly important issue. It’s our system’s formal acceptance of a person’s right to die. It’s a step forward – one that I would argue is necessary, but not sufficient, to make dying with dignity the rule, as opposed to the exception. Alone, it applies to a small group within the population of terminally ill patients, and of those, not all will elect to utilize the service. We have renovated the roof of a building with a shaky foundation. That foundation is palliative care – a type of care all patients with terminal and chronic illness should be receiving. The key to helping our patients die with dignity is improving the palliative care we provide.

The World Health Organization defines palliative care as an approach that improves the quality of life of patients, and their families, when faced with the challenges of life-threatening illness. It strives for early identification, assessment, and treatment of pain and other problems – whether physical, psychological, social, or spiritual. Interestingly and notably, it makes no mention of restriction to the final days of life, yet that is what it has come to be associated with. This critical field of medicine has also become synonymous with a lack of timely access to services, delayed referrals by health-care professionals, and limited resources at local levels.

We are doing a disservice to our patients and their families – and I would argue that much of that disservice can be linked to the cloud of darkness, misunderstanding, and stigma that surrounds the name palliative care itself. Perhaps it is my naivety as a student, but I can’t help but feel that it’s time for a change. Palliative care is broken. The goal is to support people as they approach one of the most challenging times they will ever face – emotionally, intellectually, and financially. The goal is to support – so why not call it supportive care?

Some major centres have even played with this idea. The MD Anderson Cancer Center in Texas, a global leader in oncology and palliative care, surveyed physicians to ask if they thought a name change to supportive care could impact referrals. Overall, physicians preferred the name supportive care, and expressed they were more likely to refer patients to a service with that name.

These were not the only interesting results – physicians also found that the term “palliative” more frequently causes distress and hopelessness in patients and families. They then trialed the name change at their own palliative – whoops, supportive – care centre, and actually saw an increase in referrals over a nine-month period. The research and sample size are small, but what does exist suggests that a name change could have a real impact on perceptions, and more importantly, patient access to palliative care.

Our country is on a journey of realization around what it is to live a good life and to have control over one’s destiny. That conversation is happening in many different worlds, and medically assisted dying is one of them. What needs to happen next, as difficult and overwhelming as it may seem, is trying to tackle that shaky foundation. Until we do that, we are failing our patients at their most vulnerable – we are failing to give them a good death. I believe that timely and quality palliative care is a right, not a privilege; it ought to be the rule, and not the exception. So let’s support our patients.

Complete Article HERE!

Comfort Care is ‘Good Medicine’ for Patients with Life-Limiting Conditions

By Kaylyn Christopher

Comfort Care

On Tuesday mornings on the third floor of the University of Virginia Medical Center, Ken White, professor and associate dean of strategic partnerships and innovation at UVA’s School of Nursing, meets with a team of health care professionals to receive patient reports.

Throughout the day, White will encounter patients with life-limiting conditions and will work with them and their families with one goal in mind: decreasing suffering by determining how best to improve their quality of life.

Such is the mission of White’s specialty, palliative care.

Dr. Tim Short, Dr. Joshua Barclay, and Ken White, a registered nurse and nurse practitioner, specialize in palliative care at the University of Virginia Medical Center.
Dr. Tim Short, Dr. Joshua Barclay, and Ken White, a registered nurse and nurse practitioner, specialize in palliative care at the University of Virginia Medical Center.

Working in this space is sacred work,” White said. “We are invited into the lives of people we don’t know, at a time when it’s difficult for everyone. We have to instill trust in people because this is their most vulnerable time.”

White’s shift into palliative care came while he was a health care administrator doing research on the economic benefit it could provide to his organization.

“My research showed that it improved quality of life and patient satisfaction,” White said. “It turns out there’s an economic benefit to palliative care, too, but that’s not why we do it. We do it because it’s good medicine.”

White, who is also a registered nurse, adult/gerontology acute care nurse practitioner and a certified palliative care nurse practitioner, said educating others on the benefits of palliative care can lead to drastically improving the quality of life for many patients and can also help patients’ families cope with the circumstances.

“We want to give all caregivers some base knowledge in palliative care,” he said. “This type of care is a real gift to society, our patients and their families. So investing in this is only going to make everyone give back more compassion.”

To advance those efforts, the School of Nursing, School of Medicine, Hospice of the Piedmont and Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital are collaborating to make education available through the Third Annual Melton D. and Muriel Haney Interprofessional Conference, “Honoring Differences at the End of Life,” to be held Sept. 17.

In an interview with UVA Today, White emphasized some of the benefits of and challenges to palliative care.

Q. What exactly does palliative care entail?

A. We work with quality-of-life issues, so we try to get to the heart of what makes people tick and what they live for. Then, we work with the symptoms of their disease and sometimes the symptoms that result from their treatments. We also work with primary physicians and their teams to add a layer of support to families in decision-making.

Often, these topics are hard to discuss. In our society, we don’t really bring up death and dying, and in many cases, people aren’t prepared with advance directives, which are written legal documents that state a person’s wishes when he or she can’t speak for him- or herself.

Q. What are some common myths about palliative care?

A. There is a distinction between hospice and palliative care, and that often creates confusion. Palliative care is the science and philosophy of caring for people. Hospice, in the U.S., is a Medicare insurance benefit and goes into effect when two physicians sign saying the person has a terminal diagnosis and has six months or less to live. We do partner with hospices, though, with the goal of getting patients back to their homes or in their local communities.

Another thing is that not all palliative care is end-of-life. Palliative care can start when the diagnosis is made. End-of-life is just the final hours in the patient’s last days.

Q. How do you handle the sometimes difficult conversations that come with the territory of palliative care?

A. We start with identifying the goals of care by asking questions like, “What do you want this treatment to do for you?,” and when there’s a treatment that we know is not going to work, or it’s been tried and didn’t work, when there’s nothing else that we can try, we have to let them know. Ultimately, we want to help decrease suffering as much as possible.

Q. What are some other challenges to palliative care?

A. A lot of patients come from rural areas, and access to palliative care in rural areas is not very good. We’re trying to promote new and better ways to address this, and are talking about ideas like using telemedicine.

There is also some focus on honoring differences in cultural and spiritual diversity when it comes to palliative care.

Q. Have you noticed any societal shifts in recent years in terms of the approach to palliative care?

A. Nationwide, in the last 10 years, there has been a meteoric rise in the number of hospitals that have palliative care services. We also have more training programs. There is a specialty program here at UVA in the nurse practitioner program that focuses on palliative care, because there still is not enough supply to meet the demand for physicians and nurses with this kind of training.

Q. What do you think practicing clinicians as well as members of the community have to gain from education on the topic?

A. There is a big need to educate all caregivers about palliative care. There are two types of palliative care: primary and specialty. Specialty palliative care is located in places like UVA, but for the average, small hospital in America, caregivers can practice primary palliative care and can learn enough about it to integrate it into their practice without referring to specialists.

The more people know about this topic, the more likely they are to request palliative care or have their own advance directives filled out.

Complete Article HERE!

LGBT Seniors Are Being Pushed Back Into the Closet

By David R. Wheeler

To curb harassment in care facilities, one woman is teaching staff members to respect their elders’ sexual orientations.

** FILE** In this March 3, 2008 file photo, Phyllis Lyon, left, and Del Martin are photographed at home in San Francisco. On Monday, June 16, 2008, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom will marry Martin and Lyon making them the first same sex couple to wed in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
Phyllis Lyon, left, and Del Martin are photographed at home in San Francisco. They were the first same sex couple to wed in San Francisco.

A few years ago, Rabbi Sara Paasche-Orlow was spending time with, and comforting, a friend who was dying of cancer. Along with all of the usual difficulties and complexities of end-of-life care, there was an additional concern for the friend. Despite being married to her lesbian partner, she didn’t feel like she could be open about it with the hospice worker.

“When hospice came in, I couldn’t stay next to her in the bed,” the friend told Paasche-Orlow, “I had to separate myself. I had to pretend I was something I wasn’t.”

Although Paasche-Orlow never learned the exact reason for the discomfort, her friend’s reluctance to reveal her sexual identity is widespread among non-heterosexual senior citizens in long-term care. A recent national survey of this population by the National Resource Center on LGBT Aging—which provides support and services to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender elders—found that the respondents were frequently mistreated by care-center staff, including cases of verbal and physical harassment, as well as refusal of basic services. Some respondents reported being prayed for and warned they might “go to hell” for their sexual orientation or gender identity.

In Paasche-Orlow’s case, her friend’s statement haunted her so much that she launched a series of programs to help long-term-care residents and staff members deal with the barriers to care for LGBT seniors—and the health disparities that may result. Her aim is to guard these seniors from being forced back into the closet as they age.

“I couldn’t go back and change it for my friend, but we could start thinking much more proactively about this,” Paasche-Orlow said.

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With gay marriage legal nationwide and organizations such as The LGBT Aging Project, a nonprofit that advocates for equal access to life-prolonging services, in operation for more than a decade, Americans should theoretically be living in a golden age for LGBT seniors. Yet the LGBT Aging Center’s survey found that only 22 percent of respondents felt they could be open about their sexual identities with health-care staff. Almost 90 percent predicted that staff members would discriminate based on their sexual orientations or gender identities. And 43 percent reported instances of mistreatment. Meanwhile, few elder-care providers have services directly targeted at helping them.

To deal with this problem, Paasche-Orlow decided to integrate LGBT-focused programs into her work as the director of Religious and Chaplaincy Services at Hebrew SeniorLife, a Harvard-affiliated organization that provides health care to more than 3,000 Boston-area elders. Paasche-Orlow’s programs range from sensitivity training to bringing in LGBT youth from local high schools to spend time with residents.

Although the residents are grateful for the programs, community members such as Mimi Katz acknowledge there’s still a long way to go. Katz, who came out as a lesbian in 1968, lives in a Hebrew SeniorLife facility in Brookline, Massachusetts. She says that one of the major problems today’s elders must contend with is unspoken homophobia. “In the more liberal Brookline kind of setting, nobody is going to be overtly homophobic,” she said. “It’s the same thing as racism. Nobody wants to think of themselves as a racist, but then somebody will say, of one of the black aides, ‘Oh, she’s so well-spoken.’ That kind of thing. Or somebody will say to me, about a woman whose child is gay, ‘Oh, the heartache she goes through.’”

Katz can’t help but be exasperated when these moments occur. “It’s like, ‘Hello!’” she said.

In terms of concrete activities offered by Hebrew SeniorLife, Katz was especially appreciative of her community’s screening of the 2010 documentary Gen Silent, which follows the stories of six LGBT senior citizens who must navigate the intricacies of a long-term care system that is unsupportive of LGBT individuals. But Katz believes what will ultimately benefit LGBT elders the most is staff training. “The only way to deal with it is by example,” Katz said.

According to Paasche-Orlow, most care providers and staff members would never knowingly discriminate against someone because of their sexual identity. But that doesn’t mean LGBT seniors feel like they can be themselves. There’s a difference, Paasche-Orlow acknowledged, between wanting to provide a safe environment and actually providing one. “What we know about the whole field of cultural competency is that, unless I really understand the person I’m serving, I’m going to provide them with what I personally would like, or what I think they need.”

For example, a well-meaning staff member might accidentally make an LGBT elder uncomfortable by asking certain questions—about spouses, children, or grandchildren—that assume the resident is heterosexual. “Instead, we encourage people to ask, ‘Who are the important people in your life?’” Paasche-Orlow said.

Paasche-Orlow’s work does seem to be influencing the Hebrew SeniorLife staff. “The series of LGBT trainings that we went through opened my eyes to the experiences and needs of the transgender community,” said Marie Albert Parent Daniel, a nurse at Boston’s Hebrew Rehabilitation Center who now considers herself an LGBT advocate. “The trainings also gave me language and terminology to help support and educate staff members who may be struggling with how to best care for LGBT residents. … It hurts my heart to see that there are elderly people who are afraid to share their stories and live openly.”

Although an increasing number of long-term care facilities throughout the country are doing more to reach out to LGBT seniors, significant progress is needed before this becomes a widespread practice, said Tari Hanneman, director of the Health Equality Project at the HRC Foundation. “Unfortunately, because so many LGBTQ elders are not comfortable being out, aging service providers often do not realize that they are serving this population and do not recognize that they may need to change their policies and practices to become more LGBTQ-inclusive.”

Complete Article HERE!

Companionship provided so no one dies alone

More hospice volunteers, hospitals and individuals are providing end-of-life support

By Gurveen Kaur

Volunteers (from left) Jeanette Wee, Francis Lim, Jaki Fisher, Tio Guat Kuan (sitting), Ng Seng Chuan, Angela Sho, Paul Koh and Ashleigh Quek provide a comforting presence to patients with no family or close friends in their final hours at Assisi Hospice.
Volunteers (from left) Jeanette Wee, Francis Lim, Jaki Fisher, Tio Guat Kuan (sitting), Ng Seng Chuan, Angela Sho, Paul Koh and Ashleigh Quek provide a comforting presence to patients with no family or close friends in their final hours at Assisi Hospice.

The ultimate present you could give a dying person may well be your presence.

At Assisi Hospice, 15 volunteers take turns to sit by the side of dying patients until their last breath.

They are part of No One Dies Alone, a volunteer-centred programme that provides companionship to dying patients who have neither family nor close friends to accompany them in their final hours.

The volunteers simply provide a comforting presence, lending emotional and psychological support without the help of medical equipment or medication.

At the hospice, it was a long-time volunteer, Ms Jaki Fisher, who suggested the programme in 2013 after hearing about it from a friend in the United States.

The English-language teacher, who is in her 30s, says: “It resonated as I have felt alone before and would not want these patients to feel this way before they die.”

No One Dies Alone was started in 2001 by Ms Sandra Clarke, a nurse in the US, and has been implemented in several hospitals there.

In 2014, she helped implement it at Assisi, whose former chief executive she knew, and also provided training materials. To be a volunteer with the programme, one has to clock at least three months at the hospice and have no recent bereavement in the family in the past six months.

To date, 19 residents have been admitted into the programme. After being identified by medical social workers as suitable candidates – having no family or loved ones – patients are invited to be part of the programme. If they accept, the volunteers will get to know and befriend them.

Once a patient is identified to be in the “active dying” phase, the volunteers each take three-hour shifts to sit by the patient’s bedside and just “be there with the patient”, says Ms Fisher, a Singapore permanent resident who has held vigil 11 times. The period can range from a few hours to a few days.

“It’s a powerful and intense period, even though you might just be sitting there. It’s not about doing something, but being present and there for the person,” she adds.

It can be a trying and emotionally charged process for the volunteers as they must accept that their role is not to help the patient get better.

Housewife Tio Guat Kuan, 51, says: “It was hard initially as we really wanted to help the patient… but then I learnt that the greatest gift you can give anyone is your presence.”

She has held vigil for 11 patients.

Assisi Hospice is the only place here with a fully established No One Dies Alone programme. Other establishments might have other formal programmes that are similar, or depend on staff to be with dying patients instead.

Some hospitals have taken an extra step when it comes to end-of-life care too.

At Khoo Teck Puat Hospital, nurses attend a two-day end-of-life workshop to equip themselves with the skills to counsel and accompany dying patients. These include how to communicate with patients and break bad news to a patient’s family.

Dr James Low, a senior consultant at the hospital’s department of geriatric medicine, says: “Sometimes, all that is needed is a person’s presence in those final hours so they do not feel abandoned. It can be just holding their hand.”

The hospital also has 11 single, air-conditioned rooms where dying patients, identified to be nearing the end, may spend their final hours with their loved ones at no added charge.

Similarly, Tan Tock Seng Hospital has six end-of-life rooms where families can say their last goodbyes in comfort and privacy.

Outside these medical institutions, there are death doulas, or individuals who provide practical and emotional support at the end of life.

It can be a dying person or his family or loved ones who request a doula’s services, which vary from helping to sort out legal paperwork to discussing existential topics on life and death.

In Western countries such as the US, Britain and Australia, the number of these end-of-life guides has been growing in the past five years, although there are no official figures on the industry.

In Singapore, there are few, if any, death doulas.

Certified midwife and birth consultant Red Miller, 38, has been organising workshops since last year to spread the word on the role of a death doula.

The Canadian, who is based in Singapore, invited her friend, Australian death doula Denise Love, to conduct two-day training sessions in November last year and March this year. The first attracted 13 attendees and the second, 26.

One participant was Ms Helen Clare Rozario, founder of Nirvana Mind, a company that offers meditation classes.

The workshop has inspired the 32-year-old to organise a “death cafe”, where people meet to discuss death, as well as a get-together for people who have lost loved ones to suicide.

She says: “The workshop made me think about my best friend’s death two years ago and how I can set up support groups for others who have lost loved ones to talk about the impact of the death.”

Complete Article HERE!

How do you honor a dementia patient’s end-of-life-wishes?

By Bob Tedeschi

EndNotes_alzeihmerQuest

A terminal illness can be devastating for an entire family, with relatives often forced to make decisions about a loved one’s care if the patient is no longer able to do so.

If the patient has dementia, the situation can be even harder. By the time a neurological disorder is diagnosed, many patients can’t think clearly or articulate their wishes for end-of-life care.

So what to do?

Amid the many imperfect options comes a new and promising one.

The Conversation Project, an organization that publishes a guide called “the Conversation Starter Kit,” to help families through end-of-life conversations, recently released a sequel for families of Alzheimer’s and dementia patients. Co-produced by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, it was co-written by Ellen Goodman, a Pulitzer-winning journalist who founded the Conversation Project and who lost her sister to Alzheimer’s disease roughly four years ago.

“The day she was told by a doctor that she had Alzheimer’s, we got back in the car. She talked about it for a moment and I had this great sense of relief that it was finally on the table,” Goodman said. “Then of course the next day she forgot.”

“We were really too late,” she said.

Goodman knew she wasn’t alone. When promoting the importance of end-of-life conversations, she said, “We were repeatedly asked the question: ‘Yeah, but what if your loved one is cognitively impaired?’”

The new guide, which is available in full here, breaks down the conversation into several steps, with recommendations based on a person’s cognitive abilities.

If the person with dementia is still able to process information effectively, the guide suggests leading them through a brief questionnaire known as the “Where I Stand Scales.” On a scale of 1-to-5, for instance, they are asked how much they’d like to know about their condition and treatment, or how much of a say they would like to have in their medical treatment.

If they are in the midstages of the disease, loved ones are encouraged to gather information in small bites, and look for the right opportunities to talk. Dementia patients often have moments when they remember certain events clearly, like the extended illness of a friend, and such topics can offer the chance to ask questions that might uncover a person’s medical preferences.

If a relative can’t participate in the conversation, the guide suggests a family meeting in which participants fill out the questionnaire as the patient would.

“So often, the doctors will have the family in the room, and they’ll all be absolutely positive that their loved one wanted something, and they’ll all have a different idea of what that is,” Goodman said. “It’s critical to say ‘Let’s bring this person in the room: How did they make decisions? When did they say something about someone else with Alzheimer’s?’ Figure out what that person wanted, not what you want.”

For families who may be prone to conflict or messy tangents, the guide serves as a script and a means of building empathy through brief testimonials. One such testimonial reads: “The shame involved is very parallel to mental illness. The more profound or accomplished the people are, the more shame is involved. The behavior can be so off the charts that you want to both protect and hide.”

There’s an all-important recommendation that too many families overlook — namely, to create a written statement of wishes for caregivers, other family members, and EMTs to follow, and circulating the document or placing it somewhere that’s hard to miss. (On the refrigerator door, for instance.)

Joanna Baker, of Brookline, Mass., moved her parents closer to her home several years ago so she could more effectively manage her mother’s Alzheimer’s disease and spend time with them while they were still relatively healthy. The new Conversation Starter Kit came too late to help her form an end-of-life plan with her mother’s direct input, but she said it helped her in other ways.

“With someone in cognitive decline, you really have to go do the detective work — intuition, translating signals,” she said. “It’s already hard enough. We’re all plodding through this with a tremendous underlying stream of grief.”

Looking for signals in a loved one’s suddenly foreign behavior, she said, requires separating oneself from that grief long enough to view such behaviors not as a reminder of something lost but as a token of something valuable.

Baker has seen her mother exhibit new tendencies the more time she has spent in the dementia unit: deep affection for, and whispered conversations with, a realistic-looking stuffed cat named Douglas, and an affinity for brightly colored caps from washing detergent bottles, for instance.

There was also the time she lashed out at a doctor who gave her a flu shot.

“The doctor said ‘She’s telling you she really doesn’t want an intervention,’” Baker said. “That was like gold to me, because she was helping me interpret my mother’s behavior.”

Her mother is happy, and Baker is confident she is helping her mother live her life according to her mother’s wishes, down to the songs that play in her room.

“We’ve had to cull the music selection, because things she might’ve liked at one time would be less understandable,” she said. “‘Somewhere Over the Rainbow’” always works.”

“How do I know this?” she added. “I pay attention. Her toes tap when she hears that music.”

 Complete Article HERE!

Home Remodeling and Modifications for People with Special Needs

By US Insurance Agents

senior-veteran-in-wheelchairIs it difficult to remain independent and get things done at home because of the lack of modifications in a standard house or apartment? The U.S. government, as well as a multitude of private not-for-profit organizations, is doing its best to make sure that each person with a definable need has a home that accommodates their limitations and requirements. There are resources available for determining what modifications need to be made and what needs to be done to get them completed. In addition to that, funding is available for the disabled, elderly, veterans, low-income, and even for students and others who are just getting started in life.

Federal Laws

If you own your own home, you have the right to make modifications, although it is very likely that a local inspector may have to approve them and make sure that they meet safety standards and that the construction is being done properly.

However, it’s not just home owners who have rights. According to the federal Fair Housing Act and Fair Housing Amendments Act, disabled renters are allowed to make reasonable modifications to make life easier, as long as the property is not left in a way that it cannot be reasonably used by the next tenant. As long as you have a disability that can be confirmed by a doctor, you are protected by the law. The property owner has some protection as well. To avoid people abusing the right to modify a home, a property owner may ask to see a letter from your physician confirming the disability, especially if it is an invisible disability, such as a mental disorder, that may not be easy for a nonprofessional to identify.

Federal Resources

The U.S government has many programs that offer assistance with home modifications. Here are a few of our top picks:

The Process

To begin with modifications, the first thing you will need to do is consider your needs.

Assess your space and your needs. It is easiest to make a checklist that clarifies what you currently need assistance with at home, what are your current safety concerns, and what would make your life easier.

Things to consider:

  • Handrails – Are they already provided in all areas where you may need them, such as along ramps, stairs, in the bathroom, or by the bed?
  • Stairs – Do you need to climb stairs to get into the building or to access areas within the building such as laundry facilities or rooms in your apartment or house?
  • Tripping hazards – Are there rugs or other aspects of flooring that may cause a tripping hazard?
  • Lighting – Is there enough lighting and can motion sensors turn it on or is the switch easily accessible?
  • Non-slip surface – Are there areas in the kitchen, bathroom or elsewhere that may be a slipping hazard?
  • Doors and door handles – Are the handles easily reachable and is the door maneuverable?
  • Safety – Can you see who a visitor is without having to open the door first?
  • Your own unique needs!

To learn more about creating a checklist and assessing your needs, visit The Assistive Technology Advocacy Center (ATAC) of DRNJ’s Home Modification Resource Guide.

You can also visit AARP. They have an excellent page, Make Your Home a Safe Home.

disabled youngsters

The Next Steps

Now, it is time to start the process, but where should you begin? Planning!

Planning

This is a good time to bring a contractor in to help create a design for the adaptations. It is important to find someone who is qualified. Ask locally, look into their references, and do not be afraid to reach out to more than one before making a decision. You can also check with theBetter Business Bureau and your local Chamber of Commerce to see if they have any complaints filed against them.

  • If you are looking for ideas to share with your contractor, the Fall Prevention Center for Excellence has a great Video Library.
  • The Federal Trade Commission has a section on Hiring Contractors.

Designing

This is where all of the ideas come together. Work with a professional and make sure that all of the details that you need are included in your design. You want your home not just to be adapted to your needs, but also to be a pleasure to live in.

For ideas for how to go about designing a home, you can visit:

Remodeling

Remodeling can be a big step, and not every home needs major alterations. Some can do with just temporary and removable modifications. The process of major modifications may also leave the space unusable during the construction process; however, the long-term results may be more than worth the temporary inconvenience.

To learn more about remodeling, visit:

Other Things to Consider

There is a lot to consider when making changes to the home. Take your time, consider all of the pros and cons, and look into as many resources as you can.

Temporary vs Permanent Changes

Do you plan to stay in the residence, or will you be moving at some point? Investing in major changes to a building that you cannot bring with you may not be suitable if you see yourself changing locations in the future. However, permanent changes may be sturdier and long lasting, which can be beneficial in the present as well as the future.

disabled vets

Tips and Advice

Look into what adaptations are used in other residences. Do not forget to consider the materials, available space, and how you will be using that space. Most importantly, never be afraid to ask questions!

You should also take into consideration your own specific needs.  Will recommended changes make a big difference to you?  Are there other changes that could improve your daily life more than others?

Don’t take the retail prices of items at face value.  There are different ways of paying for updates which means certain updates may be less expensive than the sticker prices you see.

Additional Resources

Costs

When making estimates, make sure to include all labor, materials, permits, consultations, and extra expenses such as alternative accommodations while the area is under construction.

Funds

When added all together, the costs can seem unattainable, but remember the government programs listed at the beginning of this article, and also look into the following organizations:

Additional Information for College Students

Disabled students are protected under the law. You have the right to reasonable accommodations, and that includes either on-campus or off-campus housing that is adapted to your needs. In addition to a suitable living space, if you have a proven disability the university must also assist in making sure that you can access courses and course materials.

Additional Information for Renters

As a renter, you may feel as if you lack the rights of a homeowner. However, that is not the case when it comes to U.S. law protecting the rights of the disabled. You simply need to know your rights, and know who to reach out to when those rights are not being recognized.

To learn about your rights, you can visit:

Complete Article HERE!