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Home > Elder Care  > Solitary Confinement -- for Life 

Elder Care - Community Impact Newspaper

Elder Care
Community Impact Newspaper, TX - 5 hours ago
Meals on Wheels and other similar home-based elder care programs have endured for generations, and newer organizations have followed suit by finding fresh ...

Solitary Confinement -- for Life

Sixty-five year old Arthur Jones served a self-imposed life sentence - in his own home.

Arthur lived in a high crime neighborhood, so he built iron cages around his outside doors and installed bars on all the windows. No one could find it easy to break in to Arthur's house!

I met Arthur a few years ago, although you would hardly call our interaction meeting. When I arrived to deliver his meal, as part of the Meals-on-Wheels program, Arthur barely cracked open his front door even though his cage clearly protected him. He refused to open the cage door at all, so, to give him his meal, I had to angle the box through the bars. Without doubt, this maneuver scrambled the hot contents of his boxed meal, but Arthur would have it no other way. He clearly feared me, a 100-pound woman, and everyone else.

I wish I could say that Arthur's family came to his rescue, finding for him the medical and emotional treatment he needed. I cannot. Arthur's depression and paranoia compounded relentlessly, killing him at far too young an age.

Many elders live like Arthur, holed up in their own homes, barricaded against the world. Who cares? Family and friends must care, and they must assume the primary responsibility, acting before their elder's condition rivals that of Arthur. We cannot shift this burden to our government. We cannot wish it away. Those among us lucky enough to have elders in our lives must shoulder the responsibility of seeing that they do not succumb to depression.

At this holiday season, many elders experience transitory depression, as celebrations bring memories of friends and loved ones who have died. Decreased hours of sunshine may add to their depressed feelings. How do you know if your elder suffers from serious depression? And, if you suspect depression, what you should do? Here are a few tips.

What signs should lead you to suspect serious depression?

  • Lethargy and or refusal to get out of bed;

  • Changes in Sleep Patterns, such as sleeping all morning

  • Unusual Complaints

  • Memory loss and loss of ability to concentrate

  • Frequent sighs or weeping if unusual for the sufferer

  • Feeling fear and loneliness;

  • Thoughts of death

  • Refusal to eat

  • Refusal to take prescribed medications

  • Thoughts or talk of suicide (remember, the notion that suicides do not signal their plans is a myth!)

  • Significant changes in personality

  • Irritability

What Can You Do?

A few simple steps may improve their condition rapidly:

  • Call more often than usual.

  • Take your elder for outings away from the house.

  • Schedule a medical appointment to confirm or deny your suspicions, and be the one to take your elder to that appointment. Depression often accompanies the early stages of Alzheimer's disease and other dementias.

  • Check bottles to be certain that your elder is actually taking prescribed medications at the recommended dosages. Too many or too few pills in the bottle can warn you of problems. If you find evidence that medications are not taken as prescribed, gently probe to see if you can learn why.

  • Include the elder in parties and holiday festivities, but keep the duration of their participation at a level they can handle comfortably.

  • Drop in more often than usual on homebound elders.

You don't have to be a doctor or social worker to recognize the signs of depression. Take action now to protect those who protected you.

About The Author

Phyllis Staff, Ph.D. - Phyllis Staff is an experimental psychologist and the CEO of The Best Is Yet.Net, an internet company that helps seniors and caregivers find trustworthy residential care. She is the author of How to Find Great Senior Housing: A Roadmap for Elders and Those Who Love Them. She is also the daughter of a victim of Alzheimer's disease. Visit the author's web site at http://www.thebestisyet.net

pando19@yahoo.com

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Holidays with Aging Parents: Elder Care Expert Has the Prescription for Caregiver Stress (PRWeb via Yahoo! News)
For many families, the problem with the holidays is family. Elder care expert Esther Koch provides insight into how caregivers of aging parents can bring the joy of the holiday season to the elder care experience. Two US teen care givers charged with elder abuse (Irish Examiner)
TWO teenage girls who worked at a nursing home have been charged with abuse, accused of taunting, spitting on and groping the breasts and genitals of residents who suffered from Alzheimer’s disease and other dementia disorders. Expert: Long-term care health coverage a hidden casualty of economic slide (EurekAlert!)
( University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ) Many Americans have lost more than just retirement savings amid a year-long economic meltdown that has sliced the US stock market's value by nearly half in a little over a year, a University of Illinois elder law expert says. Medical society head sees gaps in elder care (Windsor Star)
As a busy family physician, Dr. Nick Krayacich is all too familiar with the growing challenges facing our health care system. Continuous care facility proposed in Edina (Edina Sun-Current)
Residents of 7500 York Cooperative have proposed adding an assisted-living and long-term care facility that might ultimately free up some single-family homes in Edina. Expert: Long-term care health coverage a hidden casualty of economic slide (PhysOrg)
Many Americans have lost more than just retirement savings amid a year-long economic meltdown that has sliced the U.S. stock market's value by nearly half in a little over a year, a University of Illinois elder law expert says. Caregiver Charged in Connection with Death (WCAX-TV Vermont)
A Calais woman was supposed to care for a vulnerable adult, but instead she's charged with contributing to her death. Police look for 911 caller in elder abuse case (Galveston County Daily News)
TEXAS CITY — Police were searching for the person who called 911, which led to the discovery of a woman barely clinging to life. Nature buffs care for Cotton Creek Marsh (Wauconda Courier)
Wearing a bright orange hat and equipped with loud power tools, Mike Bouska can be easily found through the abundant thicket of Island Lake's Cotton Creek Marsh, a place he often visits on the weekends and sometimes after work on weekdays. Sri Lanka child recruitment deal (BBC News)
A breakaway Tamil Tiger faction which supports Sri Lanka's government agrees to end child recruitment, the UN says.
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