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New Hope for Alzheimer’s Patients…and Their Caregivers
Alzheimer’s Disease touches as
many as 4.5 million people1 and their
families in the U.S. families are forced to spend down all their assets to qualify for care under Medicaid’s Title 19. Complicating matters, the average Alzheimer’s case lasts eight years. Former President Ronald Reagan, for instance, may have suffered for a dozen years or more. For families and caregivers, finding relief from the caring for Alzheimer’s patients, the time for personal needs or sleeping without interruption or worry, takes on critical new meaning. Fatigue is common. Caregivers can suffer from loneliness, helplessness and of being disconnected from friends during the slow downward spiral of Alzheimer’s.
During the slow journey, nearly 60% will wander during some time. For people with Alzheimer’s, their personal safety is at risk. They can easily hurt themselves or others, become lost, dazed and confused, not knowing their own name. Wandering puts a patient in places and positions they often are incapable of understanding. Their capacity to reason is impaired, yet in earlier stages they physically are relatively unencumbered. That’s the cruelty of the disease. If you’re the caregiver, your life will be gravely affected. It could lead you to depression, extreme sleep deprivation or both. Caregivers struggle to find time of their own, free of worry. The things we take for granted like being able to shower, do laundry, cook meals, clean house or reading quietly become major challenges in homes with Alzheimer’s patients.
If timing is everything in life,
it’s certainly never been truer than with
Alzheimer’s. The slow Early intervention in many situations can bring peace of mind to the caregivers of Alzheimer’s patients. There is hope with alternative strategies for keeping an Alzheimer’s patient at home; solutions that help relieve some of the emotional and physical burdens of caregiving.
is comfortable and safe.
Is this incarceration? The best answer to that question is that those people for whom this device was designed don’t perceive the interior world of the enclosure as you or I might. The cognitively impaired mind of a person with Alzheimer’s just doesn’t perceive of surroundings as a normal person does. In fact, in clinical studies with dementia patients, they felt “secure and cozy”, almost “cocoon-like” in the enclosure. They never felt claustrophobic or “caged”. In fact, the spouses of study patients related how very
Reluctance to consider using a
Safe Enclosure is really more about our own
biases and
Institutionalizing Demented Relative No Relief for Caregiver
Caregivers who must make the
difficult decision to place their relatives with
Alzheimer’s into
The Healthcare Economic Case for Continued Care of Your Alzheimer’s Relative at Home.
Sources: 1 Alzheimer’s Association Facts
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