

By Vicktoria Baylor, October 29, 2009
Many concerned family members feel like they can only watch from the sidelines as they observe the gradual deterioration of the health of an elderly loved one. Seniors often receive a reputation for stubbornness and an unwillingness to compromise. Can you really blame them? Coming to terms with old age is something everyone will put off as long as they can. Some folks have no choice but to relocate to a nursing home when critical health issues arise. Sometimes the issues are stealthier though, and appear very gradually. How do you know when the time comes to look into senior care options before an accident actually occurs?
There are a few tell-tale signs of needed senior care that can reveal themselves to you in the form of daily struggles that require assistance. Such difficulties could include the inability to complete chores or even a complete negligence of them. A change in behavior that includes going from being a neat freak to one who could care less about the cleanliness of their home could be much more than a simply behavioral change. They could be losing the ability to complete chores but resist telling anyone the truth about it because they fear the nursing home life. More seriously, it could be the onset of a mental condition that causes them to forget or simply not care about the things that used to characterize their behavior.
The other sign that it is time to look into senior care is if tasks like bathing and dressing become overly difficult or even dangerous. A classic mishap is an elderly person slipping in the tub, hurting themselves and being unable to call for help. If you want to prevent a disaster like this from happening, catch it before it becomes too difficult of a task to complete independently.
An ongoing, time consuming medical condition can put strain on a family who cares for a senior. Perhaps before it becomes unbearable to manage you should look into senior care options. You are almost guaranteed to be the one who must make this decision as the elderly are often not attuned to their own issues or they are too prideful to admit they need assistance. Educate yourself on the differences between varying housing options or in-home care. Depending on the issues faced specifically by your elderly loved one, you may want to look into different senior care options with differing levels of medical and custodial care.
AmeriCare Homecare provides the best in-home care options available. Contact a local office for more information about services provided.
Tags: elderly, homecare, in-home care, mental condition, nursing home, respite care, senior care
Posted in: Uncategorized
By Debbie Reis, President of AmeriCare, October 22, 2009
Do you ever place other people’s needs before your own? Do you ever feel that you care for a loved one out of responsibility or moral obligation? Do you ever feel like no one fully appreciates all that you do?
If you answered yes to any of these questions, you fit the description of a caretaker. As a caretaker, you stretch yourself thin. You sacrifice your own personal time rather than disappoint a loved one. Often your day is a frantic attempt to balance the needs of family, work and the person for whom you care. You can easily feel overloaded, as your best never seems to satisfy all the things required of you. It’s frustrating, exhausting… and it’s unnecessary.
There is a happier, healthier way to meet your responsibilities. It involves a transition… to a caregiver.
Caregivers take a different approach. They recognize their limitations, and realize that they must take care of themselves before they can be of any help to anyone else. Instead of franticly juggling, they prioritize. They delegate. And most importantly, they seek help before they become overwhelmed, stressed out and resentful of those who depend on them. Caregivers understand that time spent with a loved one must never become a burden or a chore. That’s not productive or healthy for either one of you. Time spent with a loved one should be time you appreciate… quality time… sometimes trivial, sometimes silly, but often filled with moments that will become memories.
Becoming a caregiver can be quite a big transition. And it can require help. At AmeriCare we’re focused on providing this help, so you can find balance. Our professional caregivers are trained to be resources for you, whether you’re looking for companion, at home or senior care. By matching the right professional with your specific needs, we can offer your loved one comfort and you confidence.
We think of it as a solution for the whole family, which is only natural because almost every AmeriCare employee has been a caregiver for someone in their own family. It’s a difference you will notice in all the thoughtful things we do.
Tags: caregiver, caretaker, respite care, responsibility, senior care
Posted in: Uncategorized