HomeBoundResources.com

HomeBoundResources.com
Tammy I. Glenn, Founder and CEO

Welcome Caregivers!

(To skip to this week's post, scroll down...)

Special needs situations, like those we find in a home healthcare setting, demand special responses.

The fact that you’ve registered to participate in this blog is a sign that you are in a special needs situation. You are probably under a tremendous amount of stress and strain – both physically and emotionally – and you probably feel very alone right now.

Take heart…you are not alone.

For what it’s worth, the National Family Caregivers Association (visit their website at www.thefamilycaregiver.org/about/) estimates that there are approximately 54 million people in the nation currently caring for someone in need.It’s not an easy road, and that’s why I’ve created HomeBoundResources.com.

Let's not reinvent the wheel. Together, as a community, we are the experts in collecting and sharing the most important resources, information, and help for people who are challenged by a home healthcare situation.I really do care about how caregivers and patients achieve the highest standard of living possible. To that end, I recently introduced contributing writers as part of Tammy's Think Tank Team. Everybody benefits by a little help from their friends! Look for interesting articles on Fitness, Relationship Dynamics, Mobility, Overcoming Challenges. If you have an issue that needs addressed, let us know. You'd be surprised by the creative solutions people use!

I understand that every situation is different, and good advice in one situation may not be so appropriate in another. So, please let us know what’s working and what’s not. Visit http://www.homeboundresources.com/, and explore the tips, resources and publications available.

And, if you’ve got some advice of your own on a topic that I’ve written about, please feel free to e-mail your feedback to me. This effort works best when we all help each other.

From My Heart to Yours,
Tammy
Tammy@HomeBoundResources.com

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Managed Care...My "Plan A"

I've been looking into Long-Term Care, and recently had an interesting conversation with a friend who is an Occupational Therapist. These are the professionals who evaluate one's ability, among other things, to live independently.

She posed some interesting questions which I am now considering. To date, she asked me how many of the grandparents and parents in my family had required long-term care. By the way, Long-Term is defined as one month or more of 24-hour care. To this, I responded, "None, outside of my mom." Everyone's healthy, active, maintaining a strong social network, traveling, and even keeping part-time jobs of some kind. Neither my husband's parents nor my father show any signs of memory loss or slowing down.

Based on her professional and personal experiences, my friend challenged me on my perceived need to purchase Long-Term Care. She suggested that unless one of our parents were to have a major accident or develop a long-term, life-threatening illness (which doesn't run in either sides of our family), I may want to consider Managed Care as my first line of defense.

Managed Care is a great alternative, if needed. Managed Care facilities offer safe, comfortable living environments where people live independently, and have access to immediate assistance or medical help. Also known as Senior Living Communities, I understand they equate to living in a dormitory at college. Seniors can usually choose from a variety of living situations that include apartment-style, townhouse or a free-standing home. Occupational Therapists, like my friend, are on staff to regularly assess each person's needs and to ensure that everyone's needs are being addressed in a timely manner.

In the event that I live across the country, as is the case with my husband's parents, then a Managed Care facility would allow them to stay close to their social network and established physicians. I believe that this is one of the single-most important factors in a care-giving decision. What's more, Managed Care facilities often host a hospital on site that is within walking distance of the residences. This is another important component in making sure that spouses and friends have easy and frequent access to support one another.

Now, I have not yet explored the costs of my "Plan A," but I think this is a much more realistic and humane approach to ensuring a safe, dignified and loving solution for parents who are clearly independent and capable of caring for themselves.

I'll be sending out a sample of the assessment used by Occupational Therapists to determine an individual's ability to live independently. If you'd like a copy, visit the Home Page at http://www.homeboundresources.com/ and sign up for my weekly tips and information.

If you've had a personal experience in determining your best plan: Managed Care and/or Long-Term Care, please share your thoughts with us.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

On being the Grievor and the Consoler

Two close friends each lost their mothers this last week.

The first call came last Saturday evening. The second call came Sunday afternoon. Each knew death was imminent, and each family was preparing in its own way. Still, the pain of losing someone so close to you is beyond words.

That's part of the reason I'm addressing both the role of the Grievor and the Consoler this week. I'm not sure which is more uncomfortable. It's because Death is such an uncommon routine to most of us. When it happens, we don't know how to act or how to console. Whichever shoes you find yourself in, it's good to have a plan.

Now, my two friends are quite different. One follows religion and the other doesn't. Both, however, are following their own private rituals in order to heal their hearts. I, as the consoler, stayed present and emotionally available for both of them this week.

In the case of my first friend who is an observant Jew, he and his family are finding tremendous comfort in following the rituals of the religion. Judaism has very definite ways by which the deceased is not only prepared for burial, but also mourned following the services. It's from observing these practices myself that I've found it so important to encourage others to explore some branch of organized religion.

People find tremendous comfort in being surround by their family, their friends and their community. Religion--whatever Faith you practice--offers a roadmap toward healing. If you have not explored or recently participated in a religious community, I hope you'll consider it as an option. We are not meant to go through Life alone.

That's why, in the case of my second friend, I encouraged him to organize a memorial service of some kind to celebrate his mother's life. His mother specified that she did not want a burial service, so her children have made private arrangements for her body.

By not having a ritual in place, however, my friend and his sister were left a little uncertain as to how to confront their grief as well as the friends and family who also were feeling the loss. I encouraged them to consider having an Open House Memorial at their mother's home. Just like my first friend who would be surrounded by family and friends who loved his mom and loves him.

"Don't worry about the food," I said. "There'll be plenty of food!" It doesn't seem to matter what culture, what religion, everyone shares the love of comfort food. In both cases, my friends were smothered with love, hugs, good food, old stories, new stories, and their mother's houses were so crowded and noisy that I wondered if their mom wasn't around the corner laughing and crying with the rest of us.

Death is not comfortable--now should it be--for the Grievor or the Consoler, but when the time comes, there's no getting out of it. Neither the Grievor nor the Consoler needs to say much. Sometimes a hug says it all.

Most of all, map out a ritual so that you don't have to improvise while you're in a heightened state of emotion. You don't have to have every detail figured out, but have a framework of a plan in place that will help you and others begin the healing process.

This week, I write in memory of Martha and Corinne--two extraordinary women who influenced my life with their smiles, their good cooking, their passionate approach to life, and most of all, their precious sons who will always be two of my best friends. Hugs Guys!