"Long Term Care Insurance can cover the costs of Assisted Living, Homecare or a Nursing Home; plan for the future"
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Posts Tagged ‘long term care Toronto Ontario’
Monday, January 11th, 2010
Tips for Caregivers
Emotionally, caring for an elderly parent who always cared for you can be a disconcerting role reversal, and without addressing these new emotions, caregivers eventually feel frazzled, overwhelmed, and unable to deal with all the new changes. But with proper preparation, a lot of the stress that comes from taking on the role of primary caregiver for an elderly relative can be avoided.
One of the hardest things for caregivers is (more…)
Tags: aging trends, Caregiver Support Toronto, caregiving, caregiving strategies, Elder Care, long term care, long term care Toronto, long term care Toronto Ontario Posted in aging trends, Care Giving Strategies, Elder Care | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009
Aging at Home in Ontario
Because the number of seniors in Ontario will more than double in the next sixteen years, the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care is developing what they call “Ontario’s Aging at Home Strategy”. Announced in 2007, the strategy calls for an increase in home care and community support services to allow elderly residents of Ontario to age comfortably at home, rather than moving into a long term care home.
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Tags: aging trends, Elder Care, long term care, long term care Toronto, long term care Toronto Ontario Posted in Care Giving Strategies, Elder Care, Long Term Care, Private Care | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, October 20th, 2009
Long Term Care: Not Age but Function
Generally when we think of “long term care,” our mind automatically goes to senior citizens living in nursing homes. But long term care isn’t a matter of age; it’s a matter of function. There are many Canadians currently living in long term care facilities who are not elderly but nonetheless require round the clock long term care.
Who are these younger Canadians who require long term care, and why are they living in long term care facilities?
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Tags: aging trends, Elder Care, long term care, long term care Toronto Ontario Posted in Elder Care, Long Term Care | No Comments »
Tuesday, October 20th, 2009
Long Term Care Insurance — Ontario
According to Christina Bisanz, the CEO of Ontario Long-Term Care Association, the Ontario Ministry of Health has no particular intention to increase the number of new beds in Ontario’s long term care facilities. This is despite the fact that there is already a long wait list of people — 25,000 in Ontario alone, according to Bisanz — who are waiting for placement into a long term care facility. These wait lists are only getting longer as Canada’s population ages and more people need acute long term care.
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Tags: aging trends, long term care, Long Term Care Insurance, long term care Toronto Ontario Posted in Care Giving Strategies, Elder Care, Long Term Care, Long Term Care Insurance | 2 Comments »
Monday, September 28th, 2009
Because of the baby boom generation, Canada’s median age is about to increase by quite a bit. In fact, by the year 2020, a full 20% of people living in most provinces in Canada will be over the age of 65. While these aging baby boomers will be healthier, more active, and live longer than their parents’ generation, nonetheless they will face the same problems that the elderly have always faced: they will gradually become physically weaker, cognitively weaker, and require long term care from their families or from a long term care facility.
Who are Canada’s Caregivers?
Most long term care for our elders still happens within the family. A recent survey discovered that nearly 2.5 million Canadians older than 45 are primary caregiver for an elderly family member or close friend. Of these caregivers, the majority are women (about 60%), and those most often cared for are parents or parents-in-law.
Caregiving Takes a Toll
Caring for elderly loved ones is not easy. About 53% of Canadians over the age of 65 have a severe to moderate disability. Caring for someone with these sorts of needs, while simultaneously caring for oneself and one’s own family, can lead to a great deal of stress for the caregivers. More than two-thirds of the women who care for an elderly loved one also hold down a job, while nearly 80% of men who are caregivers hold down a job.
Valinda Woods of Oakville, ON, knows what this is like. A teaching assistant in Oakville, Woods has a 90 year old father with Alzheimer’s disease who lives in his own home because he refuses to leave his house of 55 years for a long term care facility. Woods frequently leaves her job for an extended lunch in order to run errands for her father and check on him. While Woods has a very understanding employer, she wonders what would happen if her employing was less sympathetic to her plight, or if she had the sort of job that required her to be in the classroom all day.
Recognizing the Signs of Caregiver Stress
Here are a few of the signs of caregiver stress, as listed by the Alzheimer Society of Canada:
- Withdrawing socially from interacting with friends or participating in hobbies.
- Anxiety and depression.
- Exhaustion coupled with sleeplessness.
- Lack of concentration.
- Weight gain, weight loss, or increased susceptibility to sickness.
If you notice these sorts of symptoms of stress in your own life, reach out to a support group or advocacy group to help you find creative ways to cope.
Tags: aging trends, Alzheimers's care, caregiver cost Oakville Ontario, caregiving, caregiving strategies, Elder Care, long term care, long term care Toronto Ontario Posted in Alzheimer's Care, Care Costs, Care Giving Strategies, Elder Care, Long Term Care | No Comments »
Monday, September 28th, 2009
There has been much talk in the United States, Mexico, and Canada about the swine flu – this year’s virulent flu strain that has already caused deaths throughout North America. Expected to become a pandemic, nations from China to Canada have been stocking up on this year’s flu vaccine.
Doctors warn that those most at risk are the very young and the very old. What does this mean for elders living in long term care facilities in Canada? With many fragile elders living in one place, nursing homes and other long term care facilities can easily turn into a hotbed of flu development.
In Toronto, concerns over a recent unpublished paper have health officials scratching their heads over the best way to care for those seniors living in long term care facilities. The paper suggested that the regular, seasonal flu shot may actually increase the risk of catching the swine flu.
In the Toronto area, people over the age of 65 have thus far been spared from swine flu, but historically they are much more at risk and face more serious consequences from run-of-the-mill seasonal flus. For this reason, says Dr. Arlene King, who is the chief medical officer of health in Ontario, seniors will be the only ones to receive the seasonal flu shots until November. This includes seniors living in long term care facilities in Toronto and elsewhere in Ontario.
Infection Control and Prevention
The Public Health Agency of Canada produced a fact sheet late in the summer of 2009 to stop the spread of swine flu and other flu strains in long term care facilities in Canada. The stated goal of the agency is to “keep the [long term care] facility (or major areas of the facility) completely free of the influenza virus in the first place.”
To this end, the agency has recommended certain measures to prevent the spread of the disease in long term care facilities. Some of these measures include:
- Source control: Preventing visits from relatives or friends who show symptoms of flu and using partitions to create distance between residents.
- Screening for flu: Actively screening family members and other visitors for the disease if swine flu has become prevalent in a community; encouraging staff members to self-screen for flu symptoms; and increased screening of residents for any flu-like symptoms.
- Hand and respiratory hygiene: Encouraging visitors, staff members, and residents to practice common sense hand washing and cough covering.
- Isolating sick residents: Should any resident show flu symptoms, they are immediately confined to his/her bed or room, and for residents who share a room, privacy curtains will be drawn and a minimum of two metres will be kept between the sick resident and the healthy roommate.
Thanks to these proactive steps being taken in Ontario and by the Public Health Agency of Canada, preventing a major flu outbreak inside long term care facilities this winter should be avoidable.
Tags: long term care Toronto Ontario, Swine Flu Ontario Posted in Care Giving Strategies, Elder Care, Long Term Care | No Comments »
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