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Family Caregiving, Get Organized, Avoid Scams

24 Nov

This is a great article courtesy of AARP about getting family documents organized.

‘Your loved ones aren’t getting any younger, and the economy isn’t getting any better. The two trends might have something in common, and that’s why it is so important to help your family members organize their important financial documents, to learn more about their financial resources, and to help protect them against scams. What should you do to ensure the safety of your loved ones’ financial security?

Get Organized
First, you’ve got to know what they’ve got. But where to start? I can’t tell you how many adult children approach me and ask, “How can I possibly ask Mom and Dad about their finances without stirring up a hornet’s nest?” And it is true; this family conversation is often the most difficult one. It is also, however, often the most important one.’

To continue reading click here

Free Support Groups offered at Family Alliance

5 Nov

Alzheimer/Dementia
Caregiver Support Group

 This group is for anyone giving care to someone affected by Alzheimer’s disease or Dementia.

This group usually meets on the 3rd Friday of each month* at 1:00 PM

Spouse Support Group

This group is for spouses giving care to some one affected by Alzheimer’s disease or Dementia.   

This group usually on the 2nd Monday of each month* at 10:30 AM

For more information, please contact Juliana Krupka at 815-338-3590.
Pre-registration is required!

*Dates are subject to change.

Resources on Caregiving for the Elderly and Aging

16 Apr

Health Professional Press… Get the best and newest resources in aging and long-term care.

Coming Soon:

Speaking Our Minds: What It’s Like to Have Alzheimer’s, Revised Edition

By: Lisa Snyder, LCSW

Gain exceptional insight into the world of the person with Alzheimer’s through this enlightening collection of first-hand accounts.  Speaking our Minds provides an unparalleled view into the day-to-day experience of Alzheimer’s through the reflections of seven diverse individuals with the disease.

$21.95 – July 2009, ISBN 978-932529-50-0

Developing Support Groups for Individuals with Early-Stage Alzheimer’s Disease: Planning, Implementation, and Evaluation

By: Robert Yale, LCSW

This pioneering book spawned the movement to help people with Alzheimer’s disease understand, discuss, and cope with their condition.  The model has been widely replicated nationally and internationally, in such settings as Alzheimer’s Association chapters, diagnostic clinics, day programs, and assisted living communities.  Packed with clinical and administrative guidelines in a clear and comprehensive format, this book is a vital resource for all professionals starting early-stage Alzheimer’s programs.

$34.95 – 1995, ISBN – 978-1-878812-26-1

Click here to visit the Health Professional Press website for more information on these books and more like them.

**Family Alliance hosts many caregiver support groups and seminars to help caregivers learn how to find the best resources for the types of care they are providing.  We also have a caregiver resource library on-site with information and books on a variety of caregiving issues and area resources.

Family Alliance Adult Day Health Services

2 Feb

 

FAMILY ALLIANCE ADULT DAY HEALTH SERVICES

OFFERS COST-EFFECTIVE OPTIONS FOR FAMILY MEMBERS

WHO HAVE TO WORK

Our country is rapidly becoming a nation of caregivers.   According to the National Alliance for Caregiving, 44 million Americans are providing unpaid care to another adult who need some type of support because of chronic health care conditions, cognitive impairments, functional limitations, or disabilities.[i] 

 

A recent article from The Wall Street Journal by Kelly Green, titled “Solving the Caregiving Puzzle,” examined increasing demands placed on families and household budgets due to the growing number of senior baby boomers, as well as the influence of science and medicine helping people to live longer.[ii]  The article also identified families coping and responding with innovative options and strategies to help dependent parents or spouses stay in their homes, as well as methods to ease the burden on family caregivers.  However, according to a study by Health Management Associates, adult day care is a lesser known solution not widely understood.[iii]

 

Here in McHenry County, Family Alliance has offered this option for the last 27 years, and has established itself as an attractive and feasible opportunity for caregivers who need to work, thus enabling needful clients to live with their families and avoid institutional placement.  In fact, the majority of Family Alliance clients have daughters, sons or spouses who are able to maintain steady employment due to this viable option.

 

Tim, whose father attends five days a week, stated, “I thank God every day for Family Alliance,” and added that he wouldn’t be able to keep his job because his father has reached a point where cannot be left alone. 

  

Jean, whose mother has been attending Family Alliance’s Adult Day Health program for five years and works out of her home, commented that she would not be able to be as efficient in getting her work done with her mother there every day.  More importantly, she feels that her mother’s quality of life is so much better.  “Mom thrives on the stimulation and interaction with staff and other clients, which I could not provide if she was at home all day,” she explained. 

  

Jane, another daughter of a client who works as an RN, stated, “If mom didn’t go to your program, I couldn’t go to work, which is very necessary to our household income right now.”

 

With the recent downturn in the economy, the loss of retirement funds, and the need for caregivers to return to work, Family Alliance is uniquely positioned to offer the alternatives that many families may not know about.  Specifically, state money is available to subsidize qualified low and moderate income seniors over 60 to attend Adult Day Health programs.  The criterion to obtain the subsidy is based on the client’s individual income, not the families. Case managers from local case coordination units are available to do in-home assessments free of charge.  In addition, a new Family Alliance service, which was introduced this last summer, is the day room’s new hourly program, wherein caregivers can drop off a client for a number of hours with only a short advance notice.

 

Family Alliance is pleased to be able to provide and improvise its programs and services in response to the growing needs and demands of seniors and their caregivers, and will continue to work with families and other professionals in identifying creative and practical options that support McHenry County.   

 

[i] Greene, Kelly. “Solving the Caregiving Puzzle.” The Wall Street Journal. Nov. 15, 2008

[ii] Kelly, et al., 2008

[iii] Alteras, Tanya. “Adult Day Health Care Services: Serving the Chronic Health Needs of Frail Elderly Through Cost-Effective, Non-Institutional Care.” Health Management Associates. July 23, 2007    


Welcome to the Family Alliance Blog

2 Feb

Dear Bloggers,

We started this blog in hopes to raise awareness and start some dialogue on the many issues surrounding aging. We are a not-for-profit agency located in Woodstock, Illinois and we’ve been open for 27 years. We provide caregivers respite by hosting day programs for physically and mentally frail seniors, with an ultimate goal of keeping seniors in their homes longer to avoid premature placement into costly nursing homes and psychiatric hospitals.

In starting this blog, we hope to share some helpful information and make some new friends.  Check back periodically as we get this blog started, and share some of your own experiences as they pertain. You never know how your story may touch another caregiver in need of some helpful advice.

 

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