Today the Obama Administration announced the release of the National Alzheimer’s Plan. U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius reaffirmed our nation’s commitment to conquering Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias, with a specific goal of finding effective ways to prevent and treat the disease by 2025.
For more information about the plan and to watch a short video from Maine’s own Dr Coleman, Click Here!
Archive for the ‘Resources and Products’ Category
Dementia Care Workshop for Caregivers; Bay Square at Yarmouth and Advantage Home Care Team Up
Tuesday, May 15th, 2012Maine Seniors in Danger: The Smallest Room in the House May Be the Most Dangerous for Seniors
Friday, January 20th, 2012We all want the best for the senior loved ones in our lives. For many seniors, living independent lives at home is their main desire. Seniors are able to do so provided they are physically and mentally able to care for themselves. Sometimes, depending on their situations, seniors need help and guidance from friends and relatives, or from even caregivers who can facilitate the potential of seniors living home alone for as long as possible.
The key to seniors maintaining independent lifestyles depends on many factors and most importantly their safety in doing so. With that being said, it should be noted that one of the most common dangers older seniors face is falling. In fact, research shows that injuries and subsequent complications due to falls are the leading causes of death in seniors who are 65 and older. Furthermore, one out of three seniors in this age group fall each year. While not every tumble guarantees an injury, these statistics should prompt you and your senior loved ones to make every effort to prevent falls occurring within their homes.
The first place to evaluate is the bathroom. While this is the smallest room in the house, bathrooms potentially offer the most opportunities for falls to occur. Bathtub edges may be hard to step over for some seniors. Once in the shower or tub, wet surfaces can cause seniors to slip. Some seniors may not be able to stand steadily while bathing. Others may have trouble sitting down on toilets or standing up again after using them. Wet floors after showers or baths and even bath mats can cause seniors to slip and fall.
Comfort Keepers offers these ideas and solutions for safety in the bathroom:
Bathtubs and Showers
Install grab bars in proper places to aid in safe entry and exit of tubs and showers. Consider replacing a bathtub with a walk-in shower for seniors who have trouble stepping over high bathtub sides. Non-skid mats or decal applications should be applied on the floors of showers and tubs to help prevent slipping while bathing. Seniors who have trouble standing to bathe should use sturdy shower chairs made specifically for this purpose. Make sure soap, shampoos, towels and other bathing necessities are within easy reach.
Toilets and Floors
Seniors who have trouble sitting and standing up can have raised toilet seats installed to make this process easier. Grab bars should be installed for additional support. Make sure the toilet paper dispenser is easily accessible. Use a bathmat for the bathroom floor just outside the shower or tub to prevent slipping on slick floors after bathing. Place a non-skid material between the bathroom floor to prevent the mat from sliding or creasing.
While none of these safety features guarantees a no-fall zone, they certainly add layers of protection and aid for seniors at risk for falling. Your local home improvement store or durable medical equipment company carries safety devices made for specific purposes, and to ensure the safest results these items should be used instead of homemade devices. Another crucial element is installing safety aids properly and also teaching your loved ones how to use them. The discussion may be a bit hard to broach but the end result fosters safe, independent living for seniors in their own homes for as long as possible.
LePage’s MaineCare cuts would hit Maine seniors hardest.
Friday, December 9th, 2011MaineCare now helps many pay for medicine and a place to live in Maine.
By Susan M. Cover scover@mainetoday.com
MaineToday Media State House Writer
Through its MaineCare program, the state now covers a portion of the $600 monthly cost for drugs including insulin, which she needs for her diabetes. LePage is proposing to reduce or eliminate two programs that pay for prescription drugs as part of a plan to eliminate a projected $221 million budget deficit in the Department of Health and Human Services over the next 18 months.
While LePage’s plan would end MaineCare coverage for 65,000 Mainers and hit nearly all age groups, advocates for the elderly say senior citizens in Maine will be especially hard hit if lawmakers approve the cuts.
Read the rest of this Portland Press Herald Article here.
What is it like to have Alzheimer’s: A provocative discussion at Sedgewood Commons
Thursday, November 10th, 2011This special discussion series will start with a walk through virtual tour putting you in the shoes of a person with Alzheimer’s dementia.
You will see things, hear things, feel things, and your thought process will be challenged.
Sedgewood Commons wishes to extend this discussion series out to families, friends, caregivers, and work professionals to better understand what it is like for our loved ones who live with this disease on a minute to minute basis.
After the virtual tour you will sit down, discuss our thoughts, and Dr. Laurel Coleman will be here to answer questions. Please extend this to others if you think they would benefit. Space is very limited so please RSVP either by phone or email.
Sedgewood wishes you all a happy holiday season, the Dr. Laurel Coleman Discussion Series is taking a break for November and December as they realize we are all very busy these months.
Senior iPad Apps: Online assistive technology
Thursday, October 13th, 2011About 25% of Internet info is accessed over mobile devices, from people who regularly read their email on their smart phone to students whose research depends entirely on Internet access vs. library access.
A recent article about iPad use at a Florida nursing home echoed my recent immersion in AARP’s national conference vendor area, where I was taken with just how many assistive apps are being developed for iPads and other tablets. One company developed a whole house full of lick-and-stick sensors that reported back to a tablet on the number of times refrigerators were opened, front doors unlocked, toilets flushed or electric devices operated. While such electronic surveillance might seem a little creepy, it’s a simple, unobtrusive way to monitor safety while assuring independence.
I spent a little time looking around for apps that might help seniors or family members. There are dozens, ranging from touch screen apps that put a voice to words to all sorts of specific physical therapy modules that lead viewers through exercises for regaining strength and mobility.
How can you tell if an app is worthwhile? Fortunately, many are quite inexpensive, in the $2.99 range. Look at the reviews, and read the descriptive text. One particular company I saw made the same spelling error in all 30 apps that they published on the same day. It’s clear they never even went on-line to review their descriptons, and that’s a sign of shoddy development.
You can ask your doc or therapist for app suggestions as an adjunct to their therapy. For many seniors, the ability of tablets to blow up text size is a plus, and the stroking movements make page turning easier. And there are many games that are essentially brain stimulating and small-motor improving fun sessions.
A recent article in the Press Herald noted the iPads move into senior communities, and I believe we’re just beginning to see the advance of tablet-based assistive technology.





