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Archive for Senior Living Sonoma California (CA)

Truths on Senior Living and Long-Term Care

by Frank Samson, Certified Senior Advisor · Comments (0)
30 Mar

It’s essential to become familiar with key issues associated with senior living and long-term care before being confronted with the situation in your family. Most are surprised to learn about the various nuances of insurance coverage, costs and various senior living options available.

See how well you can answer these True and False statements (scroll down for answers):

1. True or False – Seniors on Medicare that need rehabilitation care to regain abilities like speaking and walking after an illness or injury such as a broken hip or a stroke are covered for 100 days.

2. True or False – Insurance coverage for caregiver assistance at home is limited only to medically necessary skilled care.

3. True or False – If a senior has been diagnosed with a type of dementia like Alzheimer’s and cannot live safely in their own home, the best option for them is in a Skilled Nursing Facility.

4. True or False – Medicare does not pay for long-term care.

5. True or False – Receiving professional care at home is more economical than living in a long-term care location like assisted living.

6. True or False – The leading cause of injury among seniors (65 years +) occur when driving.

7. True or False – Medicare can penalize hospitals for excessive readmissions, reducing Medicare insurance payments if too many patients are readmitted within 30 days of their last hospital stay.

8. True or False – About 70 percent of individuals over age 65 will require at least some type of long-term care services during their lifetime.

9. True or False – Though benefits are provided by the Veteran’s Administration for a veteran, unfortunately there are no benefits available for the veteran’s spouse.

10. True or False – From 2000 to 2010, the death rate for Alzheimer’s disease increased by 39 percent, whereas death rates for other major causes of death decreased.

ANSWERS:

1. False. As of 2013, Part A covers up to 100 days in a skilled nursing facility, and the patient receives full coverage for the first 20 days in the facility. From days 21 to 100, the patient pays $144.50 per day, and Medicare pays the rest. After 100 days, the patient must pay the full cost of staying in the facility.

2. False. Though non-medical homecare is not covered by health insurance, some is covered by long-term care insurance. Non-medical or personal assistance may be help eating, bathing, or going to the bathroom.

3. False. Those that have some cognitive impairment or dementia like Alzheimer’s, can “age in place” in residences like Assisted Living, many of which specialize in dementia care. This includes state licensed, private residences which may have 4-12 residences.

4. True. Neither will Medicare Supplement insurance. These programs will pay only for limited nursing home or home health care, and only after a patient is discharged from the hospital after a 3-day stay.

5. False. Though the majority of seniors would rather live at home, costs canreach over $10,000 a month for 24-hour care, not including all the costs associated with living in ones own home or apartment. Also, living alone can be lonely and add to depression without much social interaction. There are several options which can be far less expensive than staying at home.

6. False. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, falls are the leading cause of injury among adults age 65 and older in the United States and account for 95 percent of hip fractures. Fortunately, falls are a public health problem that is largely preventable.

7. True. The goal of the new Affordable Care Act is to is to pressure hospitals to pay attention to what happens to their patients after they walk out the door. The penalties have made hospitals pay more attention and while improving their supervision of discharged patients’ recoveries.

8. True. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

9. False. Veteran’s aid and attendance benefits for veterans and surviving spouses who require the regular attendance of another person to assist in bathing, dressing, meal preparation, medication monitoring or other various activities of daily living. The monthly benefits can range from $1,113 for a surviving spouse to $2,054 for a married veteran.

10. True. For 2000 and 2010, the age-adjusted death rate for Alzheimer’s disease increased by
39 percent, whereas death rates for other major causes of death decreased including Stroke
(-36 percent), Heart disease (-31 percent), and Cancer (-32 percent). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Categories : Alzheimer's, assisted living, Baby boomers, board and care homes, Caregivers, Dementia, Elder Care, Family Caregivers, Geriatric Care, Geriatric Care Manager, in home care, inhome care, Long term care insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, Nursing Homes, Patient Advocacy, Patient Advocate, residential care, residential care homes, senior care, Senior Care Authority Sonoma California (CA), senior health, Senior Living Sonoma California (CA), The Aging Boomers

Learn More About Memory Training

by Frank Samson, Certified Senior Advisor · Comments (0)
16 Jan

My interview with Harry Lorraine is a must listen. Harry is touted by Time Magazine as the “The Yoda of Memory Training.” He talks about untrained vs. trained memory, “senior moments,” help for those with forms of dementia and much more…a must listen! Click here.

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Categories : assisted living, Assisted Living Sonoma California (CA), Concord, Contra Costa County, Elder Care Sonoma California (CA), Fairfield, Home Care Sonoma California (CA), Marin County, Napa, Napa County, Novato, Nursing Homes, Nursing Homes Sonoma California (CA), Petaluma, San Rafael, Santa Rosa, Senior Care Authority Sonoma California (CA), Senior Living Sonoma California (CA), Senior Placement Services Sonoma California (CA), Sonoma, Sonoma County, Uncategorized, Vacaville, Vallejo, Walnut Creek
Tags : Concord, Contra Costa County, Fairfield, Marin County, Napa, Napa County, Novato, nursing homes, Petaluma, Residential Care Homes Northern California, San Rafael, Santa Rosa, Sonoma, Sonoma County, Vacaville, Vallejo, Walnut Creek

Be Careful What You Promise To Your Spouse, Partner or Parents

by Frank Samson, Certified Senior Advisor · Comments (0)
10 Jan

On January 1, 2011, baby boomers began turning 65-years-old. In fact, a baby boomer will turn 65 every eight seconds, and by 2030, there will be twice as many people over the age of 65 as there currently exist today.

As baby boomers begin to reach retirement age, more and more discussion is taking place about the aging process. One topic being discussed among families, aging in place, is the idea that it is normal for the majority of people to want to live at home as they age. The MetLife Report on Aging in Place 2.0, Rethinking Solutions to the Home Care Challenge” (September 2010) states “although a large majority of older Americans say they want to Age in Place, it is often more easily said than done. Today’s care infrastructure, technologies, existing housing, funding sources,
and the businesses and services available for Aging in Place are not being fully
realized in order to achieve the promise most hope for as America ages.”

Though staying at home is certainly the choice of the elderly, it may not be the safest or least costly choice. Below are a couple examples of comments I’ve heard from clients which are all too common:

“I promised my wife I would never put her in a convalescent home,” said a caring husband about his wife with Alzheimer’s who is also a fall and wander risk. NOTE: The home is not safe for someone in her condition. The husband is in poor health and all three children live out of state and have jobs and their own children to take of.

“I gave my word to my father that he would not go to a nursing home, and if needed, I would make sure he gets the proper care at his home. He has lived in this home for the last 50 years.” NOTE: Because of the father’s condition, he cannot be left alone, so in order to live at home, he needs 24-hour assistance, 7 days per week. Due to the significant cost for this, the father’s money will be depleted in less than one year.

There are two misconceptions that many have regarding long-term care:

1. “If I don’t stay home, I’ll need to go to a Nursing Home”
There was a time when nursing homes were the main type of facility for long-term care. Many of us remember going to visit loves ones at these locations with horrible smells and less than adequate care. Today, nursing homes are mainly set up for short-term stays after being hospitalized for recovery and strengthening. Those who need to be in nursing homes for long-term care are either on Medicaid (Medi-Cal in California) or need medical care (i.e. – IV’s, feeding tubes, wound care, coma care, quadriplegics). Most people still believe that if they are not taken care of at their own home, they will have to go to a Nursing or Convalescent Home. That is simply not true.

2. “Assisted Living is another name for a Nursing Home”
There are approximately 1,300 Nursing Homes and just under 8,000 Assisted Living locations in the State of California. Therefore, far more people who need assistance reside in assisted living versus skilled nursing. Assisted Living options range from small, family Residential Care Homes to larger, full-service communities with hundreds of residents. The smaller locations are similar to living in someone’s home with live-in caregivers who provide assistance. The larger locations (communities) are more like Senior Apartments with caregivers providing 24/7 assistance.

More and more seniors are becoming residents of small, large and specialized Assisted Living facilities including dementia care. Generally speaking, Assisted Living is for people that need help with the activities of daily living (ADL’s). ADL’s are considered the routine activities that people tend do everyday without needing assistance. There are six basic ADL’s, including eating, bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring (walking) and continence.

Be careful of the promises you make to loved ones regarding long-term care. You may be promising something that could be less safe at a far higher cost.

Frank M. Samson is Founder of Senior Care Authority based in Sonoma and also hosts “The Aging Boomers” on KSVY 91.3 or can be listened to live at www.ksvy.com, every Monday at 2pm PT. The company provides free assistance to families in helping them find the best Independent, Assisted Living and Residential Care Homes for their loved ones. He can be reached at 707.939.8744 or e-mailed at frank@seniorcareauthority.com. The company website is www.seniorcareauthority.com.

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Categories : assisted living, Assisted Living Sonoma California (CA), Baby boomers, Concord, Contra Costa County, Elder Care Sonoma California (CA), Fairfield, Home Care Sonoma California (CA), Marin County, Napa, Napa County, Novato, Nursing Homes, Nursing Homes Sonoma California (CA), Petaluma, San Rafael, Santa Rosa, senior care, Senior Care Authority Sonoma California (CA), Senior Living Sonoma California (CA), Senior Placement Services Sonoma California (CA), Sonoma, Sonoma County, Vacaville, Vallejo, Walnut Creek
Tags : Concord, Contra Costa County, Fairfield, Marin County, Napa, Napa County, Novato, nursing homes, Petaluma, San Rafael, Santa Rosa, Sonoma, Sonoma County, Vacaville, Vallejo, Walnut Creek

Sex and the Holidays

by Frank Samson, Certified Senior Advisor · Comments (0)
21 Dec

The Aging Boomers
Katherine Forsythe, MSW is a counselor, coach and educator. I was able to interview her about many of the areas we face during the holidays. If you’re older, younger, single, married, have a partner or just want to learn while being entertained at the same time, you must listen to this!

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Categories : assisted living, Assisted Living Sonoma California (CA), Concord, Contra Costa County, Elder Care Sonoma California (CA), Fairfield, Home Care Sonoma California (CA), inhome care, intamacy, Marin County, Napa, Napa County, Novato, Nursing Homes Sonoma California (CA), Petaluma, San Rafael, Santa Rosa, senior care, Senior Care Authority Sonoma California (CA), Senior Living Sonoma California (CA), Senior Placement Services Sonoma California (CA), Sonoma, Sonoma County, Vacaville, Vallejo, Walnut Creek
Tags : Concord, Contra Costa County, Fairfield, Marin County, Napa, Napa County, Novato, Petaluma, relationships, San Rafael, Santa Rosa, senior relationships, Sonoma, Sonoma County, Vacaville, Vallejo, Walnut Creek

Advances in Equipment Adapted for Elders In Napa CA

by Frank Samson, Certified Senior Advisor · Comments (0)
22 Sep

Advances in Equipment Adapted for Elders

I’m thrilled by the recent advances in adapted equipment. Books, videos, Web sites, and pamphlets are out there for almost any type of elder care, handicap, or special need. They are more widely available than people think.

Once you determine your elder’s need, you should be able to find adapted equipment that will improve the quality of his or her life.

Adapted equipment draws from a wide variety of products that can help your elder function more independently and/or on a higher level. They can help your elder regain confidence in his or her abilities, and they can even alleviate your elder’s overwhelming fear of being dependent on others.

Along with advancements in medical technology and pharmaceuticals, adapted equipment has come a long way in recent years and can be a vital part of a senior’s later years.

Most people are unfamiliar with adapted equipment, but as a caregiver, you must become aware of this growing field. I’m talking about commonplace products like a wheelchair or an elder-safe stepladder, as well as more obscure products, like jar/bottle openers and grocery store scooters. Other examples include high curved bowls and large-handle eating utensils that help prevent food spills and modified “sippy” cups that prevent liquid from spilling. Anything that can help maintain dignity and independence should be integrated into your elder’s life.

One area that has been improved tremendously is transportation. Cars, trucks, SUVs, and vans can now be modified before they are purchased or on the aftermarket. No matter what your elder’s handicap may be, vehicles today can be adapted so that even a quadriplegic or paraplegic can operate them.

…continue reading HERE

If your family is needing help with the care and assistance of a loved one in the Napa CA area, visit www.seniorcareauthority.com.

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Categories : Assisted Living Sonoma California (CA), Elder Care Sonoma California (CA), Home Care Sonoma California (CA), Napa, Napa County, Nursing Homes Sonoma California (CA), Senior Care Authority Sonoma California (CA), Senior Living Sonoma California (CA), Senior Placement Services Sonoma California (CA)
Tags : Napa, Napa County

Dehydration Prevention in Napa CA

by Frank Samson, Certified Senior Advisor · Comments (0)
18 Aug

This is a great little article about preventing dehydration in our seniors from Caring.com. For information about care and assistance for a loved one in the Napa CA area, please visit www.seniorcareauthority.com or call 866-717-2477.

Dehydration Prevention

Excerpted from The Comfort of Home for Alzheimer’s
By Maria M. Meyer, Mary S. Mittelman, Cynthia Epstein, and Paula Derr, Contributing writers

As a person ages, he feels less thirsty, so a special effort should be made to provide enough fluids. A person’s fluid balance can be affected by medication, emotional stress, exercise, nourishment, general health, and the weather. Dehydration, especially in the elderly, can increase confusion and muscle weakness and cause nausea. Nausea, in turn, will prevent the person from wanting to eat, thereby causing more dehydration.

Preventive measures include:

  • encouraging 6-8 cups of liquid every day (or an amount determined by the doctor)
  • serving beverages at room temperature
  • providing foods high in liquid (for example, watermelon)
  • avoiding caffeine, which causes frequent urination and dehydration

Original content

 

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Categories : Assisted Living Sonoma California (CA), Elder Care Sonoma California (CA), Home Care Sonoma California (CA), Napa, Napa County, Nursing Homes Sonoma California (CA), Senior Care Authority Sonoma California (CA), Senior Living Sonoma California (CA), Senior Placement Services Sonoma California (CA)
Tags : Napa, Napa County

The Truth About Cataracts In Concord CA

by Frank Samson, Certified Senior Advisor · Comments (0)
11 Aug

August is Cataract Awareness Month and at Senior Care Authority we know how important vision is to our elderly loved ones. This article shares valuable information about cataracts and what to watch for as we age. If you or a loved one need care in the Concord CA area, visit www.seniorcareauthority.com

The Truth About Cataracts

Did you know that about 20.5 million Americans age 40 and older have cataracts?

More than half of all Americans develop cataracts by age 80.

Cataracts cloud the eye’s clear lens, similar to a window that is “fogged” with steam. When the lens becomes cloudy, light rays cannot pass through it easily and vision becomes blurry.

Cataracts are not a growth or a film over the eye.  Cataracts start out mildly and have little effect on vision at first.  But as the cataract becomes denser, so does the impact on vision. See your Eye M.D. if you experience:

• Painless blurring of vision;
• Sensitivity to light and glare;
• Double vision in one eye;
• Poor night vision;
• Fading or yellowing of colors;
• Frequent changes in glasses or contact lens prescriptions.

Although cataracts usually develop as part of the aging process, they can also result from:

• Eye injuries;
• Certain diseases, such as diabetes;
• Genetic inheritance;
• Certain medications;
• Frequent, unprotected exposure to UV-A and UV-B rays;
• Smoking.
 

Currently, there are no medications or exercises that will help cataracts to disappear. However, if cataracts don’t interfere with your life, you may choose not to do anything about them.  When they do begin to interfere with daily activities, they can be treated surgically.

Cataract surgery is one of the safest and most frequently performed surgeries in the United Sates, with more than 1.6 million surgeries performed each year. After surgery, vision is improved in most patients. Laser treatment is sometimes used after cataract surgery to remove a film that can occasionally grow behind the lens implant.

Remember, cataracts are detected through a comprehensive eye exam. Early treatment may save your sight.


Article Source

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Categories : Assisted Living Sonoma California (CA), Concord, Elder Care Sonoma California (CA), Home Care Sonoma California (CA), Nursing Homes Sonoma California (CA), Senior Care Authority Sonoma California (CA), Senior Living Sonoma California (CA), Senior Placement Services Sonoma California (CA), Sonoma County
Tags : Concord, Sonoma County

In Sonoma CA, Seven Health Care Changes You Might Have Missed

by Frank Samson, Certified Senior Advisor · Comments (0)
03 Aug

Seven Health Care Changes You Might Have Missed

You’ve probably heard that the new health overhaul law this year will provide an option for young adults to stay on their parents’ health plans and set up insurance pools for people with pre-existing medical conditions who can’t find insurance. But several lesser-known provisions also take effect in coming months that could have a lasting impact on the nation’s health care system.

These provisions include eliminating patients’ co-payments for certain preventive services such as mammograms, giving the government more power to review health insurers’ premium increases and allowing states to expand Medicaid coverage to low-income adults without children.

While these changes might not have gotten at lot of attention, they could help build support for the law in the run-up to the contentious mid-term elections. Here’s a quick look at some of the changes occurring this year:

Prevention For Less

What: Insurers won’t be able to charge co-payments or deductibles for certain preventive services such as breast cancer screenings every one to two years, cholesterol blood tests and some sexually transmitted disease screenings. Insurers will also have to cover recommended immunizations at
no cost to patients. Some health care analysts have suggested that premiums may rise as a result of this and other new requirements, but administration officials say any increase in premiums would be miniscule. 

When: The change takes effect Sept. 23, which means it applies to plan years that begin after that. For many plans, their new year begins after Jan. 1.

Status: The Department of Health and Human Services says regulations are on their way. Paul Bonta, associate executive director for policy and government affairs at the American College of Preventive Medicine, predicts manufacturers of vaccines and diagnostic tests will push for their products to be labeled preventive services in a bid to have them covered at no cost to consumers.

Knowing Which Treatments Work Best

What: A nonprofit research institute will examine various medical treatments — by looking at data and conducting its own studies — to determine which methods work best. This is often called "comparative effectiveness research."

When: The comptroller general of the United States — who runs the Government Accountability Office — will appoint the 17 members of the institute’s board of governors, which will oversee the institute’s operations.

Status: Everything about this institute, from its board members to its findings about treatments, is likely to generate great interest and potential controversy. The law says the board’s findings can’t be interpreted as requiring how doctors practice medicine or what insurers cover. However, in the quest to control health care costs, employers, insurers and others may point to such data as rationales for changes in coverage and treatment patterns.

…continue reading HERE

For care and assistance information for your loved one in the Sonoma CA area, please visit www.seniorcareauthority.com.

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Categories : Assisted Living Sonoma California (CA), Elder Care Sonoma California (CA), Home Care Sonoma California (CA), Nursing Homes Sonoma California (CA), Senior Care Authority Sonoma California (CA), Senior Living Sonoma California (CA), Senior Placement Services Sonoma California (CA), Sonoma County
Tags : Sonoma County

Caring For Yourself and Your Ailing Spouse in Fairfield CA

by Frank Samson, Certified Senior Advisor · Comments (0)
27 Jul

Spouses Face Challenges in Caring for Themselves and Their Ailing Partners

They met on a blind date in 1949 and married two years later. They lived in the same Cape Cod-style house in Silver Spring for nearly 50 years. So when Leonard Crierie was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2005, there was no question that his wife, Betty, would take care of him at home for as long as she could.

Betty led him into the shower, helped him dress each morning and took him everywhere with her because, once he started wandering, as some dementia patients do, she dared not leave him alone. She learned how to change the colostomy bag he wore since he’d survived rectal cancer years earlier. She slept, fitfully, with a monitor by her bed so that she could respond if he needed her at night.

"It was difficult, but I was able to take care of him," says Betty, now 80. "Because it happens slowly, you don’t realize how bad it’s getting."

She agreed to have Leonard attend an adult day program at nearby Holy Cross Hospital — he enjoyed socializing there — so that she could get a few hours’ break several times a week; she found a Holy Cross caregivers support group very useful. But she refused the pleas from her three adult children to hire an aide to help at home. "I always felt like I had it under control," she explains, though her children thought the $18-an-hour cost also troubled a frugal woman who shops at dollar stores.

As the months passed, "we could see the stress level affecting her," recalls her daughter Linda Fenlon. "The frustrating part was, we wanted her to have some independence, some quality of life. But she saw it as her duty in life to take care of him."

For four years, Betty Crierie rarely asked for or accepted her family’s help, until a Wednesday last June. As she left her support group meeting, she remembers, "I got this funny feeling in my chest." It worsened on the 10-minute drive home. She called her daughter and said, "I’m calling 911. I think I’m having a heart attack."

Caring for a sick or disabled elderly relative exacts a toll — physical, emotional, financial — on any family member, but being a spousal caregiver brings particular challenges.

"Spouses are older and dealing with their own age-related health limitations," says Steven H. Zarit, a Pennsylvania State University gerontologist. The tasks they shoulder have grown more demanding: Family caregivers now administer arsenals of medications and undertake procedures, from wound care to dialysis, that were once the province of medical professionals.

Read more…

At Senior Care Authority, we care for and assist many senior loved ones in the Fairfield CA area. For more information, visit www.seniorcareauthority.com.

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Categories : Assisted Living Sonoma California (CA), Elder Care Sonoma California (CA), Fairfield, Home Care Sonoma California (CA), Nursing Homes Sonoma California (CA), Senior Care Authority Sonoma California (CA), Senior Living Sonoma California (CA), Senior Placement Services Sonoma California (CA)
Tags : Fairfield

Legal Guidance Needed to Protect Alzheimers Patients in Novato CA

by Frank Samson, Certified Senior Advisor · Comments (0)
20 Jul

Legal Guidance Needed to Protect Alzheimer?s Patients in Novato CA Here is an article from agingcare.com that is helpful for families with loved ones suffering from Alzheimer?s. Visit us at www.seniorcareauthority.com if you need help for a senior loved one in the Navato CA area. Protecting Alzheimer patients’ legal, financial welfare Caregiving experts often advise that after an Alzheimer’s diagnosis, family members meet with an elder law attorney to begin the process of planning for down the road as the illness progresses. "I don’t think families are well-versed in this," said Barbara Vogel, program coordinator for the Neuwirth Memory Disorders Program at Hillside Geriatric Center in Glen Oaks. "I don’t think they’re seeking the legal assistance or financial guidance that they need to do this early on so when the time comes they are prepared." Instead of doing all of their planning with a lawyer, some caregivers turn to geriatric care managers or social workers who hire themselves out as guides to those attempting to navigate the system. Orlando Gonzalez, 66, and his daughter Kim Latkovich, 38, both of Manorville, paid a social worker $700 and found the experience both cheaper and faster than dealing with an attorney. Continue reading HERE.

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Categories : Assisted Living Sonoma California (CA), Concord, Fairfield, Nursing Homes Sonoma California (CA), Senior Care Authority Sonoma California (CA), Senior Living Sonoma California (CA), Uncategorized
Tags : Concord, Fairfield
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