Healthcare professionals and community groups met in Sudbury last week to work on a billion dollar problem — the annual cost of treating seniors in Ontario who fall and hurt themselves.
Last year, 5,600 seniors in the northeast were taken to hospital because of a fall, and 1,200 of those patients had to be admitted for care.
“It's a big problem because it's the most common cause of injury amongst seniors,” said Terry Tilleczek, the senior director for the Northeast Local Health Integration Network.
Healthy Living manager Brenda Marshall from the North Bay Parry Sound District Health Unit, one of the presenters said: “We all are offering programs, perhaps in silos, and now it's time for all of us to work together to come up with common strategies,”
To listen to her full interview and read the full story, please click on the link.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/health/story/2012/11/27/sby-senior-falls-meeting.html
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Currently in the news
Ottawa's recent decision not to block generic OxyContin from entering the Canadian market has raised concern among some medical professionals who say the move will lead to a spike in addiction rates.
Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq announced Monday that it isn't part of the federal government's role to tell the provinces which drugs they can and can't approve. If the formula is considered "safe and effective" when taken as recommended, there's nothing Ottawa can do under the Food and Drugs Act to block the approval of the generic drug.
However, Dr. David Juurlink, of Toronto's Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, said generic Oxy is much more dangerous than the current version available in Canada -- and the government needs to take action.
Full story by Andy Johnson available at CTV News
Staying young and having fun
Residents'at Waverley Mansion in London Ontario, staying young and having fun! Enjoy watching the video!
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Planning For Our Parents Getting Older
by Stephen Rosenfield
We all become familiar in varying ways with the shift that occurs over time in every parent-child relationship.
If you're in your 40s or 50s you may be starting to deal with the reality that your parents, as you've always seen them, are changing. They may not be as strong, as quick, or capable as they were 10 or 20 years ago. There may be subtle deficits, and suddenly you find yourself face to face with the realization that your parents are getting old and they will not be here forever.
This itself is a very difficult idea to grasp. As someone's child, whether we are five or 55, we want to believe our parents will be with us always. Accepting that this isn't the case is an emotional struggle for many, and how we will deal with those feelings isn't something we can plan for. In fact it can be shocking.
Beginning to take on the role of care giver for your parents is another struggle, but how best to ensure mom and dad's well-being, finances, and expressed wishes are looked after is something you can plan for. This begins, ideally, by making decisions before the fact and there are four basic components you want to determine:
• Power of Attorney, Finance -- this covers financial affairs and allows the person named to act in the case of mental incapability.
• Power of Attorney, Personal Care -- this covers personal decisions, such as housing and health care in the case of mental incapability.
• Living will -- this document outlines one's wishes should they become ill and can't communicate wishes about treatment. Commonly this will include what they want to have happen should artificial life support or resuscitation be required when they are critically ill.
• Last will and testament -- covers the distribution of personal property (assets, liabilities and personal wishes), and takes effect upon death.
Additional information and resources regarding powers of attorney, living wills and last wills and testaments can be found on the government sites for each province.
For adult children, addressing these four components, begins by having a conversation. Approach your parents about the need to ensure plans are in place for them in the years ahead. Explain this will allow you to ensure their needs and desires are looked after the way they want, should they be unable to do so themselves.
If you have siblings you may be relying on them as well, first discuss the need for planning with them. If you have difficult relationships with your siblings now is the time to work on bettering your communication specific to the subject of your parents. If you can't get past the sibling issues then this will have to be addressed in your parents' planning. Perhaps it means a division of who handles what -- but being in a situation where you can't get past your fights or issues with siblings when choices must be made for your parents is exactly want you want to avoid by planning in advance.
Having conversations that lead to a clear articulation of wants regarding finances, care and estate will help get in place the documents needed to lay out what is to be done in times when stress is high and decision making skills can be challenging.
For young seniors, this all may still feel so very far away. Canadians are living longer and retiring later. But just as we plan for retirement, planning for getting old should be seen as another step in our accepted life planning, and even in broaching the subject of planning, potential challenges that will have to be navigated may come to light.
If your parents are young seniors who are disorganized in their file-keeping for example, now is the time for them to create -- or work with you to create -- a well-organized system of the inventory of investments and debts and any associated information that might be essential.
What if your parents express a desire to live out their years in their own home but haven't accounted for the potential care costs involved? Will you or your siblings be able to see those wishes through? If not, better to visit this issue now and see if anything can be done to support the associated costs. Likewise, if retirement or nursing facilities are the plans, perhaps you want to begin the research and visits together now so that a preference for a particular place can be taken into account.
What if after having the conversation, you discover your parents don't want or trust you or your siblings to look after their interests? Best to know now, as it's especially important they decide long before the fact and document the plan and appoint trusted executors accordingly.
Speaking with your parents about their wishes in life and after death to avoid surprises and field potential problems is something that should be done when they're in a position to make decisions. Taking steps to plan now will help decrease the avoidable hardship or heartache at a time where so much of it is unavoidable.
Stephen Rosenfield is a Toronto Family Mediator and Founder of Canada's first ever Family Support Expo taking place at the International Centre on Saturday October 20 and Sunday October 21.
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/stephen-rosenfield/aging-parents_b_1883876.html
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Warning signs of Alzheimer's disease
Alzheimer's disease is the most common form of dementia. It accounts for 64 per cent of all dementias in Canada . Alzheimer's disease causes a gradual (slow) onset of memory loss and a continuing decline. There are also changes in judgment and reasoning, and performing familiar, everyday tasks becomes harder.
Sometimes a person may have symptoms such as sudden onset of memory loss, early behaviour changes, or difficulties with speech and movement. These symptoms may suggest that the problem is not Alzheimer’s disease, but another type of dementia.
10 warning signs
To help you know what warning signs to look for, the Alzheimer Society has developed the following list:
1. Memory loss that affects day-to-day function
It’s normal to forget things occasionally and remember them later: things like appointments, colleagues’ names or a friend’s phone number. A person with Alzheimer’s disease may forget things more often and not remember them later, especially things that have happened more recently.
2. Difficulty performing familiar tasks
Busy people can be so distracted from time to time that they may leave the carrots on the stove and only remember to serve them at the end of a meal. A person with Alzheimer's disease may have trouble with tasks that have been familiar to them all their lives, such as preparing a meal.
3. Problems with language
Everyone has trouble finding the right word sometimes, but a person with Alzheimer's disease may forget simple words or substitute words, making her sentences difficult to understand.
4. Disorientation of time and place
It's normal to forget the day of the week or your destination -- for a moment. But a person with Alzheimer's disease can become lost on their own street, not knowing how they got there or how to get home.
5. Poor or decreased judgment
People may sometimes put off going to a doctor if they have an infection, but eventually seek medical attention. A person with Alzheimer's disease may have decreased judgment, for example not recognizing a medical problem that needs attention or wearing heavy clothing on a hot day.
6. Problems with abstract thinking
From time to time, people may have difficulty with tasks that require abstract thinking, such as balancing a cheque book. Someone with Alzheimer's disease may have significant difficulties with such tasks, for example not recognizing what the numbers in the cheque book mean.
7. Misplacing things
Anyone can temporarily misplace a wallet or keys. A person with Alzheimer's disease may put things in inappropriate places: an iron in the freezer or a wristwatch in the sugar bowl.
8. Changes in mood and behaviour
Everyone becomes sad or moody from time to time. Someone with Alzheimer's disease can exhibit varied mood swings -- from calm to tears to anger -- for no apparent reason.
9. Changes in personality
People's personalities can change somewhat with age. But a person with Alzheimer's disease can become confused, suspicious or withdrawn. Changes may also include apathy, fearfulness or acting out of character.
10. Loss of initiative
It's normal to tire of housework, business activities or social obligations, but most people regain their initiative. A person with Alzheimer's disease may become very passive, and require cues and prompting to become involved.
Thursday, September 13, 2012
7 Myths About Getting Older
The welcome presence and valuable contributions of elderly people is helping to debunk some common myths regarding seniors and the aging process. Attached is an article about seven such myths that have been disproved.
http://www.lifeinsurancequotes.org/7-myths-about-getting-old/
http://www.lifeinsurancequotes.org/7-myths-about-getting-old/
Monday, September 10, 2012
Evidence of Cognitive Impairment Seen in Gait
By PAM BELLUCK
Published: July 16, 2012
The way people walk appears to speak volumes about the way they think, so much so that changes in an older person’s gait appear to be an early indicator of cognitive impairment, including Alzheimer’s disease. Five studies presented at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Vancouver this month provide striking evidence that when a person’s walk gets slower or becomes more variable or less controlled, his cognitive function is also suffering.
Thinking skills like memory, planning activities or processing information decline almost in parallel with the ability to walk fluidly, these studies show.
In other words, the more trouble people have walking, the more trouble they have thinking. “Changes in walking may predate actually observable cognitive changes in people who are on their way to developing dementia,” said Molly Wagster, chief of the National Institute on Aging’s behavioral and systems neuroscience branch. Experts said the studies could lead to developing a relatively simple tool that doctors could use to forecast, if not diagnose, possible Alzheimer’s disease.
“You can probably just watch them walk down the hall in your office and look for people who are starting to show deterioration in their gait and have no other explanation for it,” said William Thies, the chief medical and scientific officer for the Alzheimer’s Association. “If gait begins to deteriorate, we begin to have a conversation about how is your memory.”
While scientists have studied gait changes after a heart attack or stroke and in diseases like Parkinson’s, they have only recently begun studying connections between walking and cognition. For decades, people thought slower walking was just part of getting old, but research shows some changes in gait signify problems that go beyond normal aging.
“It’s like driving a car — you need an engine, a chassis and steering,” said Dr. Stephanie Studenski, an expert on walking who was not involved in the dementia studies. The engine of walking is the heart, lungs and blood, she said. The chassis is the muscles, joints and bones. And the steering is “the wiring — the nervous system,” said Dr. Studenski, a geriatrician at the University of Pittsburgh and the Pittsburgh Veterans Administration.
“People who are focused on cognition largely never watch people move,” Dr. Studenski said. “The tests are all done sitting down. But damage to the wiring is an important shared problem of difficulty with thinking and difficulty with moving.”
The new studies were larger and more detailed than previous research, and involved sophisticated measures of changes in gait. Some used an electronic walkway, a long mat outfitted with sensors that measure small differences in walking speed, cadence (the number of steps per minute), the width of the stride and variability (how often the person’s stride changes).
The studies screened out people with arthritis or other physical problems, and adjusted for height, age, weight and sex.
One study involved more than 1,100 elderly people in Basel, Switzerland. About a quarter of them were cognitively healthy, while the others had mild cognitive impairment, considered a precursor to dementia, or were in various stages of Alzheimer’s.
The participants walked normally on the electronic walkway, and again while performing a cognitive task: counting backward by two’s from 50, or naming animals. One 72-year-old woman’s first walking test betrayed no problems. But when she walked while counting backward from 50, her gait worsened dramatically, said Dr. Stephanie Bridenbaugh, head of the Basel Mobility Center. “She teetered and wobbled on one foot,” Dr. Bridenbaugh said. “She almost tipped to the side.” And “she didn’t notice any of it,” she added. “She was mad that she didn’t remember more numbers.” Dr. Bridenbaugh referred her to the memory clinic, where cognitive testing showed the woman already had mild cognitive impairment.
Asking people to simultaneously perform thinking and movement tasks revealed “deficits that you can’t see with the naked eye,” Dr. Bridenbaugh said. It may be that the brain is already so compromised that it cannot coordinate its circuits to efficiently manage such “dual tasks.”
“A lot of times normal walking looked normal, even in people with moderate Alzheimer’s, but if you look at dual tasking, I can detect these problems,” said Dr. Bridenbaugh. Her research consistently showed that people who walked more slowly or inconsistently did worse on cognitive tests; the worst walkers had the most severe Alzheimer’s.
For Full story with video, click here http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/17/health/research/signs-of-cognitive-decline-and-alzheimers-are-seen-in-gait.html?pagewanted=all
Friday, August 31, 2012
An Old man went to the doctor complaining of a terrible pain in his leg. “I am afraid it’s just old age”, replied the doctor, “there is nothing we can do about it.” “That can’t be” fumed the old man, “you don’t know what you are doing.” “How can you possibly know I am wrong?” countered the doctor. “Well it’s quite obvious,” the old man replied, “my other leg is fine, and it’s the exact same age!”
Up The Creek With A Paddle
Henry Miller once described table tennis as a game of endless fascination. The American novelist, who wrote such masterpieces as Tropic of Cancer and Black Spring, used to play at his home in California.
Howard Jacobson, too, is an aficionado of the little game. The Booker Prize-winner, who wrote The Mighty Walzer about his ping-pong obsession, started playing as a teenager in Manchester in the Fifties and never really stopped. For him, the game is synonymous with a certain type of ironic introspection, a method of engaging with and retreating from the world at the same time.
“Table tennis players,” he wrote, “are so lost in musings of a literary and erotic sort, and such spiders of indoor dedication to the airless game, that it is not so much surprising they are seldom seen, but a miracle they are even seen at all.”
But ping-pong, for so long a fringe activity, is undergoing a renaissance. At the elite end the sport is dominated by China, as it always has been, but elsewhere it has moved into some surprising cultural niches. In many British cities, such as Manchester and London, outdoor tables are positioned in garden squares and railway stations for passersby to use.
There is also a craze for the game among the fashionistas. At the Spin club in Manhattan, leggy blonds and advertising executives mingle around designer tables in a basement venue on the corner of Park Avenue and East 23rd Street. The last time I went down I played doubles with Susan Sarandon and a catwalk model called Jessica. I am not quite sure what Jacobson would have made of it, but Miller would certainly have approved.
Much of the latent charm of table tennis is captured in Ping Pong, a documentary directed by Hugh Hartford. The democracy of table tennis is that anyone can play, regardless of age, and Ping Pong introduces us to eight players as they prepare for the 2010 World Veteran Championships in China. They hail from diverse parts of the world and have very different training regimes, but they have one thing in common: they are all aged over 80.
Much of the film’s power derives from its moral seriousness. Over the course of 75 compelling minutes, table tennis becomes a metaphor for life. We meet Lisa Modlich, an 86-year-old Austrian now living in Houston, Texas, who won the Croix de Guerre after joining the French Resistance during the Second World War. Sassy and sexy, she is brutally honest about her longing for victory. “I should beat that old girl,” she says of a rival. “She can’t even move.”
We also meet Les D’Arcy, an 90-year-old Yorkshireman whose competitive instinct is rather more poetical, but no less implacable. “You have to dream of winning if you are going to have a chance,” he says. “If you don’t dream you can’t win.” Much of his preparation involves lifting weights in a large sports hall. “He is a living legend,” a fellow weightlifter says.
Although each player wants to win, they have also found a particular kind of salvation through table tennis. Inge Hermann, an 90-year-old German, discovered the sport after her husband passed away. “He died of cancer and suddenly my food didn’t taste so good. So I stopped eating,” she says. “I got an illness in my brain and couldn’t think clearly any more. Table tennis saved me. It helped me to regain the broken parts of my brain.”
Sport is invariably viewed through the prism of professionalism. We are preoccupied with full-time athletes and their frenzied pursuit of marginal gains. Ping Pong offers an important corrective. It shows that sport can be competitive, but also redemptive. Playing for love rather than money changes the moral basis of sport. When D’Arcy defeats Rune Forsberg, an 86-year-old Swede, the two men hug. “Table tennis has taught me how to win, “Forsberg says. “But it has also taught me how to lose.”
Certainly, watching Ping Pong reconnected me with something I had almost forgotten. There was a time, before rankings and pay cheques, when table tennis was important for its own sake. I would play in the garage with my older brother and lose myself in its rhythms and acoustics. We would play for hours, exploring the weaknesses and strengths of each other, but also something within ourselves. It felt almost like a kind of awakening.
Local leagues cater to this aspect of amateur sport. In the early 1980s we would play at venues that were often shacks in the middle of nowhere, with icy paths and dodgy electric heaters. The ball was forever getting lost behind the curtains. Tea and digestive biscuits would be offered at half time and tasted like heaven. We would play our matches, fighting like tigers, and then go back to our cars and return to obscurity.
It was — and is — marvellous. We were brought together, like nomads, by a shared passion. The only evidence that we had actually played against each other was not medals or fame, but the scorecards that were collected at the end of the season. We each, in our own way, embraced the paradox of sport as a vehicle to nowhere in particular except personal satisfaction and camaraderie. And, back then, in what seemed like a gentler sporting epoch, that was more than enough.
Ping Pong is a rather wonderful film, but it is much more than that. It is about aging, mortality, friendship, ambition and love. The stories stay with you for hours, weeks, after the credits have rolled. But perhaps its most powerful achievement is to leave us with a more humane conception of sport, and of life itself.
© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Ontario's Health Quality Monitor
Ontario’s publicly funded healthcare system is under intense pressure from a combination of spiralling costs, an aging population and government budgetary austerity. The challenge of delivering high-quality care to all Ontarians remains, however, critically important. In order to meet the needs of the population, Ontario’s healthcare system must consistently adopt evidence-based practices that can improve outcomes, eliminate waste in the system and organize the delivery of healthcare around the patient to create a smooth journey for the individual. This is essential to ensuring that our health system is sustainable for future generations.
One of the roles of Health Quality Ontario (HQO) is to monitor and report to Ontarians on how well our healthcare system is performing.
This Quality Monitor is HQO’s seventh annual report. It describes how the different parts of the system – primary care, home care, long-term care and hospitals – perform across nine dimensions of quality: accessible, effective, safe, patient-centred, equitable, efficient, appropriately resourced, integrated and focused on population health. It analyzes whether quality has improved or worsened and, where possible, how Ontario compares to best-performing jurisdictions in Canada and internationally. HQO also has a role in driving change throughout the system. It identifies the evidence-based practices that healthcare providers should implement, and recommends practice standards, also based on evidence, that organizations need to follow. It makes recommendations on how health services should be funded in order to encourage
the highest quality. It amasses knowledge about the different tools or approaches that are useful in implementing best practices and spreads this knowledge to healthcare providers.
To that end, this year’s Quality Monitor is divided into a series of two-page themes. The first page describes key findings and presents data on how we compare to others and whether or not we have improved. The second page describes improvement strategies.
It highlights the evidence-based practices that should be implemented, including those recommended by the Ontario Health Technology Assessment Committee (OHTAC), now part of HQO. It also lists practical ideas on how to implement best practices, and references ‘change packages’ developed by HQO that describe these implementation tips in greater detail. Ideas for implementation include specific improvements to processes of care, tips on how to measure quality and feed-back results to providers, clinical decision supports to remind providers to carry out important tasks, staff skills that need to be developed, resources that need to be acquired or reconfigured, opportunities for patient engagement to enhance implementation, and accountability mechanisms or incentives that need to be designed. These strategies for improvement are also classified according to the different audiences that have to implement them – providers, patients and policy-makers.
This year’s printed version of Quality Monitor features a more compact design to enhance readability. Additional content, including full graphs for all indicators, will be made available online in stages after the print report is released. There are two-page summaries of key findings for hospitals, long-term care, homecare and primary care, with questions intended to stimulate self-reflection in leaders and caregivers. This year’s report continues to highlight local success stories closely linked to its key findings that demonstrate improvement is possible. Additional stories will also be made available online.
How we compiled this report
HQO examined data from sources that include Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care (MOHLTC) databases, Statistics Canada census data and international surveys from the Commonwealth Fund and others. The Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) helped us conduct many of the data analyses. Researchers, clinical experts and healthcare executives reviewed our findings for accuracy and validity.
Key findings
All sections of this year’s report point to one overall theme: progress is being made in many areas, but it has been slow. In order for Ontario’s healthcare system to achieve true excellence, the rate of progress needs to be accelerated. Three areas in particular demonstrate the extent to which this is the case:
• chronic disease management and avoidable hospitalizations
• wait times
• hospital safety
Chronic disease management and avoidable hospitalizations
Chronic diseases are common within the Ontario population. Although there are some positive signs of improvement in the management of chronic diseases, there is still huge room for improvement. People are not routinely receiving all of the evidence based best practices in chronic disease management that could maintain their health. Care is fragmented, especially when people are discharged from hospital or move from one provider to another or have multiple providers. This creates excessive burden on individuals and their families, and leads to hospitalizations and readmissions that likely could be avoided.
When I Was Your Age
A young man who was also an avid golfer found himself with a few hours to spare one afternoon. He figured if he hurried and played very fast, he could get in nine holes before he had to head home. Just as he was about to tee off an older lady shuffled onto the tee and asked if she could accompany the young man as he was golfing alone. Not being able to say no, he allowed the her to join him.
To his surprise the lady played fairly quickly. She didn't hit the ball far, but plodded along consistently and didn't waste much time. Finally, they reached the 9th fairway and the young man found himself with a tough shot. There was a large pine tree right in front of his ball - and directly between his ball and the green.
After several minutes of debating how to hit the shot the lady finally said, "You know, when I was your age I'd hit the ball right over that tree."
With that challenge placed before him, the youngster swung hard, hit the ball up, right smack into the top of the tree trunk and it thudded back on the ground not a foot from where it had originally lay.
The lady offered one more comment, "Of course, when I was your age that pine tree was only three feet tall."
To his surprise the lady played fairly quickly. She didn't hit the ball far, but plodded along consistently and didn't waste much time. Finally, they reached the 9th fairway and the young man found himself with a tough shot. There was a large pine tree right in front of his ball - and directly between his ball and the green.
After several minutes of debating how to hit the shot the lady finally said, "You know, when I was your age I'd hit the ball right over that tree."
With that challenge placed before him, the youngster swung hard, hit the ball up, right smack into the top of the tree trunk and it thudded back on the ground not a foot from where it had originally lay.
The lady offered one more comment, "Of course, when I was your age that pine tree was only three feet tall."
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
How to find more time: Give some away
Seems there’s never enough time in the day, right? But if you want more time, try giving some away. A new study finds that those who volunteer their time feel they have more of it.
“Although it seems counterintuitive to give away any of your time when you feel your time to be scarce, our findings suggest that even spending small pockets of time to help others can make people feel more effective, and like they can do a lot with the limited time they have,” said study leader Cassie Mogilner of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.
“Giving time makes people feel like they have more time,” Mogilner told LiveScience.
It’s not the first study to find benefit in volunteering. Research last year found that people who volunteer live longer.
In the new work, a set of four experiments found that when it comes to easing the pressures of time, volunteering beats goofing off or otherwise making time for yourself, and even beats getting a sudden windfall of extra time. In one experiment, 218 college students were assigned one of two 5-minute tasks that had them either giving or wasting time. Giving time involved writing a short email to a gravely ill child. In a survey after the assignment, those who gave their time reported feeling like they had more time than those in the other group.
Giving away time seems to boost your sense of efficiency and competence, Mogilner and her colleagues explain in a paper to be published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
You don’t need to make a huge commitment to skew your perception of time.
“Carve out 10 to 15 minutes a day to do something for someone else,” Mogilner suggests.
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
A police car pulls up in front of grandma Bessie's house, and grandpa Morris gets out. The polite policeman explained that this elderly gentleman said that he was lost in the park and couldn't find his way home.
"Oh Morris", said grandma, "You've been going to that park for over 30 years! How could you get lost?"
Leaning close to grandma, so that the policeman couldn't hear, Morris whispered, "I wasn't lost. I was just too tired to walk home.
"Oh Morris", said grandma, "You've been going to that park for over 30 years! How could you get lost?"
Leaning close to grandma, so that the policeman couldn't hear, Morris whispered, "I wasn't lost. I was just too tired to walk home.
Eight Secrets of Aging Well
If you spend your day toggling between pining for the past or fretting over the future you may not notice that there is actually nothing at either one: the past doesn't exist and neither does the future.
You must live life in the present -- the key to aging successfully -- but you can't do so if one foot is chained to the past and both hands are shielding your eyes from the fuzzy future. Your vision will be blocked, your hands will be full and you'll be teetering on one leg!
Yes, plan for the future but then let it go. We all have memories of things past but after you reminisce a bit, let them go too. Turn your focus back to the present.
People who age successfully do so not because they look like an arrested version of their 20-year-old selves, but because they are fully engaged in the moment. They enjoy the small pleasures of the day and take the challenges in stride. Sure, they have bad days but they bounce back more easily than others do.
Why? Because they try to integrate the following eight habits into their day as often as possible:
1. Get healthy from the inside out: Ditch the red meat, processed meat and refined carbohydrates and sugar and increase the whole grains, fruits and vegetables, nuts and seeds, fish and chicken. Try to get 30 minutes of moderate exercise every day and aim for seven to eight hours of sleep a night. Do what you can and remember that lasting change happens slowly over time. Forgive yourself when you fall back into old habits and keep trying.
2. Practice gratitude: When you're in the midst of a stressful situation it's hard to focus on what's going well in your life but perspective is what you need when you're worried about something. First, do what you can to address the problem but then take a moment. Think about, or make a list of the things in your life that you are grateful for such as family members, friends, your health, your intelligence, even the city you live in. Try it and you'll be surprised at how your mood improves and you feel a sense of renewed energy.
3. Learn to relax: This is one of the hardest things any of us can do in our overstressed world and that's also why it's so critical to master. It may be 30 minutes of yoga, an intense game of soccer or simply closing the bedroom door and breathing deeply, in and out, for five minutes. Deep breathing is probably the best thing you can do because you can practice it any time, anywhere and it will immediately lower your blood pressure. Remember that stress is insidious; it wears you down by stealth, moment by moment without you even realizing it. The great news is that something as simple as breathing can do so much good.
4. Laugh: How many times did you laugh today? Yesterday? Studies show that laughter is great for your health. Spend time with friends or family members who make you laugh or watch your favourite funny movie. There are days when you just need a dose of The Marx Brothers or Naked Gun! Laughing is not a luxury and it's not just something you do when you're wasting time; it's essential for good health.
5. Socialize: Try to see friends and family as often as you can. No budget to go out? Tidy up the house and invite people over for coffee and cookies. Socializing doesn't have to be a big, expensive production. The goal is to spend some relaxing downtime with those you care about and who care about you.
6. Practice kindness: From the smallest gesture to the largest, either impromptu or planned, kindness given and received is one of the best ways to live in the moment. It makes you feel good, makes the other person feel good and it's so easy. Holding the door for someone is the quickest way to make them smile. Giving or receiving a hug will make you both feel better immediately. There is nothing like practicing kindness to keep you in the moment.
7. Learn something new: It's hard to get distracted when you are learning something new and interesting. It's too much fun! Whether it's a new language, figuring out Facebook or just taking a new route to the mall, you're totally engrossed and you're learning all the time. It may be a little nerve-wracking but you'll soon get the rush of accomplishment and that's a great feeling!
8. Build your courage and self-esteem: Are you facing a challenge right now, something you aren't sure you can handle? Take a moment to yourself and recall some of the difficult things you've faced in the past. Remember what the challenge was and how you handled it. Review several of these but not in great detail -- you must focus the bulk of your attention on the task at hand. Just remember what the issue was and what you did to address it. Go through three or four of these and you'll find a renewed sense of your own strength. The courage you were trying to summon will be there because you will have a renewed belief in yourself. Practice this "accomplishment rewind" anytime you feel uncertain about your ability to deal with a current challenge.
Integrate these eight habits into your day as often as possible and you'll find yourself aging successfully -- because you'll be too busy doing it to be aware of it!
For the complete article, click here www.huffingtonpost.ca/kathy.../successful-aging_b_1654063.html
Monday, July 9, 2012
Queens Elder Law Clinic
The first of its kind offered at a Canadian law school, the Queen's Elder Law Clinic offers free legal assistance to low-income seniors in Kingston, Ontario on elder law related topics. Caseworkers are law students, who work under the supervision of professional lawyers. They assist with legal issues, such as:
- Incapacity planning (drafting powers of attorney, wills, and advising on related issues);
- Financial exploitation through the misuse of powers of attorney;
- Family violence, abuse, and neglect;
- Access to health care services;
- Access to long term care; and
- Problems arising on discharge from hospitals into inappropriate facilities.
A client must meet certain criteria to be eligible for our services. They must be a low-income individual, over 60 years of age, who resides in Kingston, Ontario, and has a case that we are able to take.
Please note: eligibility is determined on a case-by-case basis and that we do make occasional exceptions to the criteria in applicable circumstances.
The Clinic also provides educational workshops for seniors groups and community organizations on various elder law related topics.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Over 50 and Almost Alcoholic
According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), drinking among seniors age 50 and older is on the rise. In fact, seniors make up the segment of the population for whom drinking has been increasing most. In one survey of seniors, 15 percent of senior men and 12 percent of senior women stated that they drank more than the limit recommended by the NIAAA on a daily basis. In doing so they put their health at risk. Why? Because as we age our bodies metabolize alcohol more slowly, meaning that alcohol (a toxic agent) remains in our bodies longer. There, it can exacerbate medical conditions such as hypertension, memory loss, diabetes, and neurological problems, all of which are more common among older adults. And drinking in excess of even a single glass of wine a day can increase the risk of cancer.
What Is An "Almost" Alcoholic?
Almost alcoholics fall in the "gray zone" that occupies the fairly large space that separates normal social drinking from drinking that would qualify for a diagnosis of alcohol abuse or dependence (alcoholism). Some people's drinking will place them fairly deeply into the almost alcoholic zone, whereas others may have only recently ventured there. That space is depicted in the following diagram:
Almost alcoholic drinking, especially among seniors, is most often defined by the following circumstances:
- Looking forward to drinking.
- Drinking alone.
- Drinking to relieve stress (due to chronic illness, financial difficulties, etc.)
- Drinking to relieve boredom or loneliness.
- Drinking to relieve physical symptoms (pain, insomnia).
For the full story, go to http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joseph-nowinski-phd/alcohol-abuse_b_1392596.html
Aging Myths: Misconceptions About Growing Older
The longevity revolution is well underway, and everything we've thought about aging is up for grabs as we live and work longer than any other generation in human history. Laura Carstensen has been on the forefront of research on aging for nearly 30 years. She's a professor of psychology at Stanford University, director of the Stanford Center on Longevity, the author of several books and recipient of numerous distinguished awards. Below are some myths that she has uncovered.
Older People are Miserable
Happiness is not the domain of the young. In fact, older people tend to be happier than young people.
Writes Carstensen: "With the exception of dementia-related diseases, which by definition have organic roots, mental health generally improves with age." Older people generally focus on the essential, don't sweat the small stuff, and enjoy their freedoms when their children leave the nest.
Writes Carstensen: "With the exception of dementia-related diseases, which by definition have organic roots, mental health generally improves with age." Older people generally focus on the essential, don't sweat the small stuff, and enjoy their freedoms when their children leave the nest.
DNA is destiny
According to Carstensen, "one of the paradoxes of American longevity ... is that medical science has become powerful enough to rescue people from the brink of death but remains largely impotent when it comes to erasing the effects of the lifetime of bad habits that brought them there." In other words, having a healthy lifestyle is as important as having good genes when it comes to age and wellness.
Common sense prevails here. If you smoked a pack of cigarettes a day for decades, you'll pay later. Ditto for obesity, drug or alcohol addiction and lack of exercise. Don't smoke. Drink in moderation only. Exercise regularly. Keep your weight down. Cultivate stable emotional relationships. Develop good coping skills for handling life's fast balls.
Common sense prevails here. If you smoked a pack of cigarettes a day for decades, you'll pay later. Ditto for obesity, drug or alcohol addiction and lack of exercise. Don't smoke. Drink in moderation only. Exercise regularly. Keep your weight down. Cultivate stable emotional relationships. Develop good coping skills for handling life's fast balls.
Older People Drain our Resources
The Scarcity Myth is precisely that: a myth. Longevity isn't feeding population growth. Booming youth populations in third world countries and other complex demographic shifts are the real problem.
Writes Carstensen: "Bottom line: Population growth is an issue, but Grandpa living longer is not the problem. The true issue is that the gift of increased longevity is unevenly distributed around the globe. In some parts of the world where the youth population is booming, those children may never have the chance to grow old." Meanwhile, the aging workforce is a truly massive force to contend with.
Writes Carstensen: "Bottom line: Population growth is an issue, but Grandpa living longer is not the problem. The true issue is that the gift of increased longevity is unevenly distributed around the globe. In some parts of the world where the youth population is booming, those children may never have the chance to grow old." Meanwhile, the aging workforce is a truly massive force to contend with.
We Age Alone
According to Carstensen: "Aging is inevitable. How you age is not. You will very likely spend about three decades of your life as an old person. Deal with it. Death is the only alternative. If you can put behind you the fantasy of eternal youth, you can begin to plan seriously for what comes next. You can begin to think hard about the type of old person you want to be..."
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Invitation to attend the 2012 Geriatrics Institute at Mount Sinai Hospital on June 28th
Mount Sinai Hospital is hosting the 2012 Mount Sinai Hospital Geriatrics Institute on Thursday, June 28 th in the Ben Sadowski Auditorium located on the 18th floor. This year’s theme is Through the Looking Glass:
Mount Sinai’s 2012 Geriatrics Institute Proudly Presents from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
When: Thursday, June 28th, 2012
Where: Ben Sadowski Auditorium, 18th floor, Mount Sinai Hospital
Keynote Speaker: Sociologist and Author, Lyndsay Green To attend, RSVP to Phoebe Tian at ptian@mtsinai.on.ca or 416-586-4800 ext. 7856 as space is limited for this free event!Health and Social Care Professionals and Advocates. This year’s event features a diverse group of speakers from the Advocay Centre for the Elderly (ACE), Toronto Central CCAC, Reitman Centre for Alzheimers Support and Training, Seniors Peoples Resources in North Toronto (SPRINT), VHA Home Healthcare amongst others.
An Older Patient’s Experience across the Continuum of Care.
Come join us for this free full day educational event as we follow the adventures of Alice as she and others start to experience the all too common trials and tribulations of a vulnerable older adult struggling to maintain their independence after sustaining a hip fracture.Mount Sinai’s 2012 Geriatrics Institute Proudly Presents from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
When: Thursday, June 28th, 2012
Where: Ben Sadowski Auditorium, 18th floor, Mount Sinai Hospital
Keynote Speaker: Sociologist and Author, Lyndsay Green To attend, RSVP to Phoebe Tian at ptian@mtsinai.on.ca or 416-586-4800 ext. 7856 as space is limited for this free event!Health and Social Care Professionals and Advocates. This year’s event features a diverse group of speakers from the Advocay Centre for the Elderly (ACE), Toronto Central CCAC, Reitman Centre for Alzheimers Support and Training, Seniors Peoples Resources in North Toronto (SPRINT), VHA Home Healthcare amongst others.
Monday, May 28, 2012
Taking Care of Your Mental Health
There have been a number of blog entries written on the physical health of seniors. While many of the practices previously outlined can have positive effects on one's mental health as well, this is the first to speak directly on the topic of seniors' mental health.
Contrary to commonly held notions, as a group, seniors tend to have higher levels of mental health than do younger adults. This is backed by research that compared the responses of the two groups when asked how they perceive their levels of mental well-being. Seniors were much less likely to report feelings of depression.
In spite of this, instances do occur. One way to combat these is, not surprisingly, having social engagements. While the most obvious type of social engagement is visiting with friends and relatives, it has been found that activities such as volunteering have similar positive effects on the mental well-being of seniors.
For tips on how to begin such activities, one can visit the Ontario Seniors' Secretariat's page on Lifelong Learning and Volunteering.
http://www.seniors.gov.on.ca/en/seniorsguide/learning_volunteering.php
To read more about how social engagements affect the mental health of seniors, visit:
http://www.longwoods.com/content/18716
Contrary to commonly held notions, as a group, seniors tend to have higher levels of mental health than do younger adults. This is backed by research that compared the responses of the two groups when asked how they perceive their levels of mental well-being. Seniors were much less likely to report feelings of depression.
In spite of this, instances do occur. One way to combat these is, not surprisingly, having social engagements. While the most obvious type of social engagement is visiting with friends and relatives, it has been found that activities such as volunteering have similar positive effects on the mental well-being of seniors.
Picture source: http://actionplan.gc.ca/initiatives/eng/index.asp?mode=3&initiativeID=58 |
http://www.seniors.gov.on.ca/en/seniorsguide/learning_volunteering.php
To read more about how social engagements affect the mental health of seniors, visit:
http://www.longwoods.com/content/18716
Currently in the news...
The recent fire in an Ottawa retirement home has garnered much media attention. While the general response - to ensure sprinklers are placed in all homes may seem somewhat obvious, the event can be seen as a reminder to all of us on the importance of basic safety measures.
http://thechronicleherald.ca/canada/101224-ontario-under-pressure-to-have-sprinklers-in-all-seniors-homes
http://thechronicleherald.ca/canada/101224-ontario-under-pressure-to-have-sprinklers-in-all-seniors-homes
Friday, May 11, 2012
Preventing Falls
As we age, we are put at an increased risk of developing
chronic conditions such as osteoporosis.
Subsequently, the risk of injuries due to falls increases. This can
result in older individuals becoming fearful of falling, causing them to alter
their lifestyles.
There are a number of ways that people can reduce their risk
of falls, however, allowing them to continue performing their day-to-day
activities. One simple suggestion is to wear non-slip socks. In addition to
this, engaging in light physical activity, such as walking regularly, can help
strengthen the muscles required when weight is shifted from one side of the
body to the other. In doing so, one’s balance is improved.
While these activities have positive physiological effects
on the body, there is evidence which suggests that the psychological ones are
of equal importance. Those who experience a fear of falling are at a greater
risk, as they are more likely to lead more sedentary lifestyles. One way to
combat this is to create a network of people who can be contacted in the event
of an emergency. As confidence in one’s health builds, it is reflected in the
way our bodies feel.
Taking Aim at Fall Injury Adverse Effects:
Reducing Fear of Falling:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com.ezproxy.lib.ryerson.ca/doi/10.1046/j.1365-2389.2003.51265.x/pdf
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