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Posts Tagged ‘aging trends’

Government Funding & Long Term Care in Ontario

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Government Funding & Long Term Care — Ontario

The Canadian health care system is in a state of crisis. With health care budget cuts, combined with the rising cost of health care and the growing number of seniors requiring acute long term care, aging baby boomers have a good reason to worry about whether or not government-funded long term care will be around for them by the time they need it.

Despite the fact that our neighbors to the south have proven privatized health care to be expensive, amoral, and inefficient, the Canadian government may have no choice but to ask its citizens to foot the bill for their own long term care. Consider that already, despite seniors accounting for only 12.5% of the population, they take up almost 43% of health care costs. Just Alzheimer’s disease alone costs nearly $4 billion per year. By 2031, the number of Canadians living with dementia will double. And by 2020, the percentage of seniors will have risen to 20% of the population.

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Being Prepared for Long Term Care in Toronto, Ontario and Surrounding Areas

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Being Prepared for Long Term Care in Toronto, Ontario and Surrounding Areas

One of the best things that baby boomers in their late fifties and early sixties can do is plan for their own long term care while they still can. Anyone who has cared for their own seventy-something, eight-something, or ninety-something parents can testify to the fact that as Canadians live longer, their long term care needs also increase.

Some of the questions baby boomers planning for their twilight years should ask themselves include: (more…)

I Live in the Sandwich Generation; HELP!

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Caregiver Support   Toronto, Ontario

Ontario’s life expectancy at the moment is 75 – but it’s on the rise. According to most estimates, the number of Ontario citizens who will be 85 or older will more than double by 2020. While on the one hand it is wonderful that so many Ontario residents are living longer, the rising number of older Canadians also represents a toll on families and health care systems. After all, who is it who will be caring for all these elderly Ontario residents? In many cases, it’s the Sandwich Generation.

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Alzheimer’s..What are the signs?

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Alzheimer’s..What are the signs?

About 500,000 Canadians across the country currently suffer from Alzheimer’s disease, a degenerative neurological condition which gradually robs a person of memory, cognitive function, and eventually of life. Anyone who has ever cared for someone with Alzheimer’s knows how devastating this disease can be, and how important it is to catch the disease early in order to slow its progression as much as possible. Here are eight common signs of Alzheimer’s disease everyone with an aging loved one should know: (more…)

What if you can’t Afford Private Care; British Columbia

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

What if You Can’t Afford Private Care?

Around January 2008, senior Christina Woodkey of Vancouver found that the pain in her legs was severe enough to prevent her from doing the things she likes to do, such as ski. The leg pain wasn’t life-threatening, but it made her day-to-day life uncomfortable and challenging. Her doctor told her she’d have to see a hip specialist, and that would take about a year.

One year later, the hip specialist told her she would have to see a back specialist. How long would seeing a back specialist take? Another nine months. She asked when she might expect to get the surgery she needed to solve the problem of the debilitating pain. The answer: (more…)

Long Term Care Commentary — Alberta

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Long Term Care Commentary — Alberta

Not very many people are happy with Alberta Health Minister Ron Liepert and Premier Ed Stelmach. Together, the two have concocted a plan to cut more than 200 acute mental care beds in hospitals and other institutions. Some of these beds are currently home to mental health patients, while others provide long term care to seniors with dementia, such as those living with Alzheimer’s disease.

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Alzheimer’s Care, Alberta

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Alzheimer’s Care — Alberta

Alzheimer’s disease is a devastating, degenerative neurological condition which attacks the brain and central nervous system and eventually leads to a crippling dementia. Affecting mood, memory, emotions, and behaviour, Alzheimer’s gradually robs a person of their ability to function normally and support themselves. Alzheimer’s patients must eventually have around-the-clock care in an institutional setting such as a nursing home, or by a caring relative, spouse, or friend. Alzheimer’s has the ability to cause death, but not everyone with Alzheimer’s dies directly as a result of the disease.

The Stages of Alzheimer’s Disease (more…)

Caregiver Issues: Elder Care and the Workplace, Calgary Alberta

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Caregiver Issues: Elder Care and the Workplace

As Canadians age, more and more work-aged adults are finding themselves juggling their work obligations with family obligations related to caring for elderly relatives and loved ones. Eighty percent of the elder care in Canada is provided by family members, and about 60% of caregivers are women – women who often have children of their own still living at home, and are balancing motherhood with careers and caring for an older parent, parent-in-law, or other elderly relative. How are businesses responding to the new family obligations affecting their workforce? Here’s a look at how the balance between elder care and work is unfolding in Canada.

Canadian Aging Research Network (CARNET) (more…)

Caregiver Support Toronto, Ontario

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

Caregiver Support in Toronto

Those who are caring for an elderly relative know the kind of emotional and physical toll it can take. That’s why support groups for caregivers have sprouted up all over the Toronto area.

Support groups in Toronto fall into two basic categories. The first are moderated support groups, which feature various experts who come in to share information with members of the group. The second group are self-moderated groups, which are more traditional support groups that focus on caregivers supporting one another by sharing problems they have and solutions they have found.

Alzheimer Society of Toronto Support Groups

Here’s a list of a few of the support groups for caregivers in Toronto, offered by the Alzheimer Society of Toronto:

Early Onset Alzheimer’s – Family Support Group: Contact Xochil Amaya, Counsellor, at 416-322-6560. Pre-registration is required for this group.

Frontotemporal Dementia Family Support Group: Contact Nora McKellin, Counsellor, at 416-322-6560. Pre-registration is required for this group.

Lewy Body Family Support Group: Contact Desiree Jones, Counsellor, at 416-322-6560.

Vascular Dementia Family Support Group: Contact Caitlin Agla, Counsellor, at 416-322-6560.

Workshops for Caregivers at Family Service Toronto

In addition to support groups, such as those listed above, Family Service Toronto offers ongoing workshops to help caregivers learn how to help their elderly relatives or friends. These workshops are all free, but pre-registration is required. You can register by calling 416-595-9618. Here is a list of their upcoming workshops:

“Long Distance Caregiving”: Monday, October 19, 6pm – 8pm.
“Advocating for Your Relative”: Wednesday, November 18, 12pm – 2pm.
“Finding the Joy in Caregiving”: Thursday, December 3, 12pm – 2pm.

In addition to these workshops, Family Services also offers a Caregiver Discussion Group. The group meets on Monday per month from 6pm – 8pm. Again, the Discussion Group is free, but pre-registration is required.

Caregiver stress can interfere with your ability to offer care to your elderly loved one. Support groups and workshops like those listed above are great ways to reduce that stress, learn new coping strategies, and make connections with others in the same situation as yourself.

Elder Care in Newfoundland and Labrador

Monday, September 28th, 2009

When it comes to elder care in Canada, Newfoundland is one of the more difficult places to be. A nurse from a long term care facility in St. John’s, NL, pointed out in an interview with People’s Response that her own nursing home has had to hire home health care workers rather than LPNs (certified nurses) because graduates of nursing school in Newfoundland tend to move to richer provinces in Canada. Just shifting the wages up to make them on par with the rest of Canada, begs the nurse, would help her own facility to find qualified personnel and keep them.

The Quality of Health Care and Elder Care in Rural Newfoundland

Meanwhile, CBC News reports that the Society of Rural Physicians in Newfoundland and Labrador has criticized the governments there for cutting medical services in small communities. The physicians claim these health cuts could cost lives.

As usual, those most vulnerable to these sorts of cuts are the elderly. By moving x-ray equipment out of small towns, doctors trying to care for elders will waste precious time trying to access diagnostic equipment. So far, x-ray departments have been closed in Lewisporte and Flower’s Cove; more closures are anticipated, including in Springdale. Not only have the x-ray departments been closed, the clinic hours have also been cut from 24 hours per day to 12 hours per day – another move that residents worry could endanger care for their elders.

Health Minister Paul Oram advised residents to put the cuts into perspective; the spending cuts to x-ray departments and clinics should help the government invest more in long term care facilities for the elderly, such as the one the nurse in St. John’s complained about being under-resourced and under-staffed. Oram hopes that the cuts will ultimately finances the creation of a long term care facility for the elderly in Lewisporte.

To critics, Oram has answered, “People would like to have every service in their backyard. Everybody would like a hospital in their home town.” But he advises the residents of Newfoundland and Labrador to try to be more realistic about their expectations: “there’s only so much money to go around,” Oram said.

The Future of Elder Care in Newfoundland and Labrador

Given the cuts in health care spending in Newfoundland and Labrador, as well as the comments made by the nursing home nurse from St. John’s, retirees might think twice about retiring in Newfoundland and Labrador. As part of their planning for their golden years, those nearing retirement age and their families should carefully consider the type of health care services available to them within their communities. Where health care is not adequate to meet the long term care needs of seniors and elders, Canadians might consider retiring elsewhere.

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