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Blunted Emotion

Understanding and knowing how to respond to someone’s feelings can be a very challenging thing. We have all been in situations where we did not understand another’s emotional response. Odds are, if you are reading this article, that you are more than familiar with this situation. Those afflicted with Alzheimer’s or dementia show difficulty with emotional expression, as well as mental process. This article provides information on a recent study through The University of Florida, and explores what is to be learned from this report.

Patients that suffer a progressive brain disorder are known to experience cognitive decline. It’s obvious to the caretaker that the regular mental process is disrupted. What new studies suggest is that Alzheimer’s may also inhibit those affected emotionally. The article has coined the phrase “blunted emotions”, meaning that the highs and lows of emotion have been lessened, leaving those experiencing this in a withdrawn and apathetic state. It is easy to see how emotional and mental decline would go hand in hand, and how one would certainly affect the other. The effect of blunted emotions is often confused with depression. Exactly why this occurs is not yet known, though it has been attributed to the decline of function is areas of the brain that experience/control emotion.

Read More at Sodalis Elder Living

AlzCare provides quality care and treatment for Alzheimer’s patients in Texas. Our main office is in New Braunfels, close to San Antonio. We also have offices in San Marcos, Victoria, Temple, and Waco.

Communication in Alzheimer's World

Life as an Alzheimer’s caregiver is not an easy one. Bob DeMarco with Alzheimer’s Reading Room writes on more efficient ways of coping with difficult behavior. The approach is that instead of constantly correcting your loved one, you should work with their mindset. The idea is that the one afflicted can’t change, that is up to the caregiver.

Instead of feeling obligated, the caregiver should choose their battles. There are many ways to respond to a person afflicted with Alzheimer’s, and through these responses behavior and the emotional/mental wellbeing of those in care can be greatly improved. This is an excellent article on proper and effective communication, as well as better understanding.

http://www.lcsc.edu/library/ILI/Classes/j0309615.jpgI feel very confident when I say this. While a person suffering from Alzheimer's can't remember, they are full of feelings and emotions. As a caregiver, when you try to correct a person with Alzheimer's you are likely to bring out a negative emotion in them.

How would you like to be told over and over -- you are wrong? How would you act? What emotion would you be likely to express? Would you like the person that is constantly telling you -- you are wrong? I'll let you decide the answer.

Effective communication with someone suffering from Alzheimer's requires you to identify the emotion behind the persons words. To learn ways to address what they are feeling and to validate those feelings. Right now, it is likely that when a person suffering from Alzheimer's says something that is opposed to reality --as you understand it -- that you immediately feel an urge to correct them (or worse). Is this you? You aren't listening when you do this.

You are making the situation about you and your feelings -- not about them. You are trying to drag the person into your world -- this is unlikely to happen and it rarely, if ever, works. You want to avoid any and all situations that lead to an argument. When an argument ensues it is likely that the person suffering from Alzheimer's gets agitated and says those mean and angry words you dread.

Read More at Alzheimer’s Reading Room

AlzCare – Quality Alzheimer’s treatment in Texas, New Braunfels, Victoria, Waco, and San Marcos

1 in 5 Elder Americans Victims of Financial Swindling

save-health-insurance-health-care-800X800 As parents age, children and family members are often quick to pick up on areas of weakness. Mother needs a little help getting to the store. Father could use some help with the lawn. Both parents need help with everyday tasks that they once handled easily enough. Sadly, predators and con artists also know that the elderly are easy marks. Telemarketers have been preying on seniors for years. Easily confused, lonely, and wanting friendship, some senior citizens can be taken advantage of.

A recent study by the Investor Protection Trust and the National Adult Protective Services Association reveals that a shocking one in five senior citizens will be victims of financial fraud. The study showed that:

  • One out of three seniors are currently being pitched by people calling or mailing them and asking for money.
  • Almost half of people over 65 got at least two questions wrong when asked questions about basic financial planning and investment.
  • Only 5% of aging adults’ medical providers have voiced concern about their ability to understand billing issues, while 20% of those same providers have expressed concerns about their cognitive abilities.
  • When asked, 33% of seniors admit that they feel at risk for being taken advantage of financially.

Read more at Traditions Senior Living

AlzCare provides quality care and treatment for Alzheimer’s patients in Texas. Our main office is in New Braunfels, close to San Antonio. We also have offices in San Marcos, Victoria, Temple, and Waco.

Probiotics Help Aging Digestive Tracts

probiotics One of the blogs we regularly follow is Nurse Virginia’s blog for aging patients. She is knowledgeable, practical, and regularly brings up subjects that you don’t often read about.

Recently Nurse Virginia noted a common problem with aging patients – their increasingly delicate balance of colon bacteria. Not all bacteria are harmful. Human digestion cannot occur without the symbiotic relationship we have developed with certain, helpful strains of bacteria. If a person is not careful with the use of antibiotic medications, he or she can find herself with serious digestive problems.

Those problems only increase as we get older.

Probiotics are helpful bacteria introduced into the human system to help carry out normal digestive and other functions.

Read More at Sodalis Elder Living.

AlzCare – Quality Alzheimer’s treatment in Texas, New Braunfels, Victoria, Waco, and San Marcos

The High Cost of Elders Caring for Elders

Couples, elderly, caregiving Hollywood loves a story about a heroic spouse who remains devoted to the care of his or her sick partner. That kind of devotion is something we all want to believe in. We want to believe that the words “till death do us part” are taken seriously. And they should be taken seriously – certainly they should. Because of this, sometimes the spouse of an Alzheimer’s patient is reluctant to seek help in caring for their loved one.

Spouses of Alzheimer’s patients have a unique perspective. And a unique level of guilt as well. Spouses don’t want to admit that they are unable to care for a cherished loved one. That’s certainly understandable. But the physical and emotional toll of caring for an advancing Alzheimer’s patient are very real. And they can be devastating to the health of the surviving spouse.

The Arizona Republic recently published a story about a woman named Betty who tried very hard to care for her husband, who had Alzheimer’s disease. She steadfastly refused help, wanting to preserve his dignity, wanting to be faithful to her husband, wanting to do the right thing.

As the months passed, "we could see the stress level affecting her," recalls her daughter Linda Fenlon. "The frustrating part was, we wanted her to have some independence, some quality of life. But she saw it as her duty in life to take care of him."

For four years, Betty Crierie rarely asked for or accepted her family's help, until one Wednesday last June. As she left her support-group meeting, she remembers, "I got this funny feeling in my chest." It worsened on the 10-minute drive home. She called her daughter and said, "I'm calling 911. I think I'm having a heart attack."

Read the whole story at the Arizona Republic.

Studies are now showing that spouses who care for Alzheimer’s patients for more than 4 years have a 63% higher mortality rate. Their risk of stroke is almost 25% higher as well. Caring for an Alzheimer’s patient takes an emotional and physical toll on anyone, and an aging spouse can easily be overwhelmed. And yet, husbands and wives are often the last to ask for help.

Rope to Remember 2010

rope-to-remember-270

From the AlzCare Blog Network

09/06/2010 - 18:32

By Bob DeMarco
Alzheimer's Reading Room

There is an excellent article and audio cast available on the National Public Radio (NPR) website.

If you have the time I would recommend listening to the audio.

...


09/06/2010 - 12:27

By Max Wallack
Alzheimer's Reading Room

According to an article in the Sydney Morning Herald, Dr. Ashley Bush and his...


09/06/2010 - 07:40

Do not argue with them. It gets you nowhere......By Carole Larkin
Alzheimer's Reading Room

Ever feel like your loved one is ignoring you or that you just weren’t getting through to your loved one? Try some of these tips to see if...


09/06/2010 - 01:01

Dear Carol: My mother has Alzheimer’s and has been swearing up a storm. She’s rude at times and is getting harder to take anywhere because she makes a scene wherever she goes. She is on Aricept and an antidepressant, but we feel she needs...


09/05/2010 - 10:10

My mom and I recently entered a restaurant and while we stood behind the “Please Wait to Be Seated” sign, the hostess walked rapidly toward us, not letting her unusual gait slow her down. She approached us with a large, friendly smile that made...


The Latest Alzheimer's News

09/06/2010 - 18:01

Daily MailMen twice as likely as women to be forgetful in old age, says studyIndependentIt is often associated with dementia and Alzheimer's disease later in life. The onset of dementia is a slow process of mental derangement that strips ...Men 'suffer memory issues with age'The Press AssociationStudy: Memory Problems May Be More Common In MenOzarksFirst.com (blog)Memory problems more common in men?EurekAlert (press release)istockAnalyst.com (press release) -WLBT-TV -Best Syndicationall 20 news articles »


09/06/2010 - 15:33

Study: Memory Problems May Be More Common In MenOzarksFirst.com (blog)Dr. Lamb believes more research is needed to determine if there are factors related to gender that might play a role in Alzheimer's disease.Mayo Clinic Study Finds Mild Cognitive Impairment is More Common in MenistockAnalyst.com (press release)all 6 news articles »


09/06/2010 - 15:29

New Diagnostic Criteria Will Lead to Earlier Diagnosis of Alzheimer's DiseaseSenior Housing News (blog)Patients may soon know they have Alzheimer's disease before symptoms ever appear, thanks to advances in diagnostic technology that will enable physicians to ...


09/06/2010 - 15:05

Men 'suffer memory issues with age'The Press AssociationIt is often associated with Alzheimer's disease later in life. Scientists conducting the study tested the memory and thinking skills of more than 2000 ...Active minds delay dementia but speed decline once it hitsThe Salinas CalifornianMales at Greater Risk of Cognitive ImpairmentMedPage TodayMemory problems more common in men?Eureka! Science NewsLiveScience.comall 7 news articles »


09/06/2010 - 13:55

Early indicators of Alzheimer's DiseaseHeliumWhile a certain amount of natural deterioration is often confused with the onset of Alzheimer's Disease, it's not always the case. ...


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