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Archive for December, 2009

Marla Beck attends Fred Hutch Holiday Party

The annual Magnolia Guild Fred Hutch party was held December 6th. Seattle Magnolia neighborhood volunteers come together to support the Fred Hutchinson Center by raising funds for cancer research. We meet monthly to plan and implement activities.  Our Holiday party was a gourmet potluck and gift exchange.  We also collected new fleece wear and gently used books, magazines and CD’s for the cancer patients and their family members who come from all over the world to be treated at Fred Hutch.  

Current members of the Guild

Members of the Guild

Members of the Guild

Members of the Guild

        

Marla and husband, John, at Guild Party

Marla and husband, John, at Guild Party

Adult Children Face Reality About Aging Relatives and Friends Over the Holidays in Seattle and Bellevue, Washington

This is an outstanding article which really does paint an accurate picture of what we often see happening with families this time of the year. For more information or assistance, please visit us at www.andelcare.com.

By WARREN WOLFE

Minneapolis Star Tribune

Across the nation this holiday season, thousands of families will slam into the reality that life has changed for aging parents — dad is far more frail than relatives thought, mom forgot to prepare the holiday feast, the house is filthy, the refrigerator is bare, or a stack of bills has gone unpaid.

This is known territory for many of the 46 million Americans who help frail, aging relatives and friends. But for some, it comes as a shock, and they often have little notion of what help is available, or even what is needed. 

Services for caregivers know that their phones will light up as worried adult children begin sorting out disturbing discoveries and seeking advice and help.

“Sometimes they just want basic information, but sometimes people are very worried about a parent’s driving, or falls, or ability to keep living on their own,” said Annette Peterson, help-line coordinator at the Alzheimer’s Association Minnesota-North Dakota chapter in Bloomington, Minn.

It’s common for families to disagree about what they’re seeing, Peterson said. Those arguments sometimes are sharpened on old family disputes, and neutral care advisers can help mediate disagreements and figure out what is needed. Good advice is don’t panic. If you try to address your dad’s driving and he slams the door in your face, that’s not a failure, that’s the start of a conversation.

Getting help is critical for most caregivers “because we always think we ought to be able to handle this stuff on our own, and we can’t,” said Beth Gale, who works full time and has a husband and three sons at home.

In 2007, she flew to Arizona for Christmas with her mother and found her filthy, confused and with infected scratches from her dog. She took her mom to the hospital, then to a nursing home, then to live with her family. That lasted only a couple of days before her mother fell, broke her pelvis and ended up in a nursing home with a troubled history.

“If I’d known how to get some help, I could have avoided some big mistakes,”Gale said. Her mom — who had Alzheimer’s disease, heart problems and other illnesses — is living in a small and much better assisted-living facility “and she’s happier than I’ve seen her for years.”

“My advice is, get help right away,”Gale said. “When you’re up to your neck in a crisis, you don’t know what to do, you don’t know what’s most important and you don’t know the system or the jargon. Find somebody who does.” 

For just such assistance, or additional information, you can visit us at www.andelcare.com.

Original content found HERE:

Marla Beck from Andelcare attends Mill Creek Referral Networking Holiday Party

On December 9th the Mill Creek Referral Network held their Holiday party at Merrill Gardens of Mill Creek. This was our first holiday party and was also a fundraiser for the families of the Lakewood police killed this month. We dined on prime rib and salmon and had a very fun white elephant gift exchange. I scored a pair of University of Washington bedroom slippers that are very comfy!

Marla and husband John

Marla and husband John

Women of Influence Happy Hour at the Rainier Club

The Executive Women’s Committee hosted a special celebration to honor the 2009 Puget Sound Business Journal’s Women of Influence.  The happy hour event took place at the Rainier Club on December 10th. It was a great success with over 70 women coming together in an intimate setting to celebrate successful, intelligent woman in our community. We also had some past member honorees that came to join in the fun. The 2009 Rainier Club member honorees were Dr. Nancy Auer, Nancy Pellegrino, and Patty Barrier

 

Here is the complete list of this year’s Women of Influence.

 

Rubicea Acosta, Founder & CEO, LATCareers.com

Dr. Nancy Auer, Special Medical Advisor to the CEO, Swedish Medical Center

Patty Barrier, Co-owner, Barrier Motors

Sara Carter, Owner, Carter Motors

Martha Choe, Chief Administrative Officer, Gates Foundation

Ada Healey, Vice President, Vulcan Real Estate

Ruthann Howell, President & CEO, Wellspring Family Services

Annette Jacobs, President & CEO, Door to Door Storage

Nancy Pellegrino, Regional President, BNY Mellon Wealth Management

left to right:  Cathi Hatch (member), Dr. Nancy Auer (member), Rubicella Acosta, Nancy Pellegrino (member), Ada Healey, Martha Choe, Sara Carter, and Annette Jacobs.

left to right: Cathi Hatch (member), Dr. Nancy Auer (member), Rubicella Acosta, Nancy Pellegrino (member), Ada Healey, Martha Choe, Sara Carter, and Annette Jacobs.

 

How to Find the Right Home Health Care Agency in Seattle and Bellevue, Washington

Here is a great article for anyone in need of Home Care for a loved one.  Visit us at www.andelcare.com if you need help for an aging loved one in the area.  

How to Find the Right Home Health Care Agency

by Marlo Sollitto, Editor

Marilyn is a 72-year-old widow who recently underwent heart angioplasty surgery. She is preparing to leave the hospital soon. But recovering from open-heart surgery is a long process, and her family knows she will need continued medical assistance once she gets home. The family must find a reputable home health care agency that can provide licensed nurses as well as aides to tend to Marilyn on a daily basis.

Finding the right agency can be a daunting task, but not impossible, says Tilly Gambill, Manager of Marketing and Communications for the American Association for Homecare. 

Continue reading HERE: 

Marla’s Musings

This holiday season has me thinking again about all I have to be thankful for this past year. It definitely has been an exciting, eventful year – getting married in Sedona; going to China with the Seattle Chamber of Commerce; catching my skin cancer early; building my business; networking and more networking.

As an update – Karen, my Executive Director, is recovering from her hip replacement surgery at home and making real headway on our open projects. My office staff has really rose to the occasion and been able to handle each and every situation while Karen has been home for almost six weeks. We are all looking forward to having her back in person this week.

If you need a creative gift idea for someone who needs care or is giving care we can help you with a gift certificate. Give someone the gift of a shopping helper, caregiver, personal assistant or companion.

Gifts of things are easily forgotten but the gift of spending time with someone is a memory that is with you for life. I have to constantly remind myself of this since I get so busy running around with my business. There is always more work to be done, more people to meet, more articles to write but at the end of the day the most important thing is being around the people you love. This season give someone you love the gift of your time.

I wish you all a very happy and loving Holiday season and thank you for the support you have given me as I grow with Andelcare.

Marla

 

Marla's Musings

Food for Thought

The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt with the heart. Wishing you happiness.
– Helen Keller
 

Food For Thought

The Holidays Are Coming – Visitability – Part 2

The Holidays Are Coming – Visitability – Part 2 

Part 2 in a series on Visitability by Raad Ghantous.

The most important thing you can do to make your home visit-able is to ensure that you have at least one zero-step entry into your home. That is access to your home that doesn’t require anyone navigating a change of level or steps. In case you do not have this currently you can even rent-a-ramp for the holidays to allow this access into and out of the house if needed.

Make your hallways wider and more accessibility friendly by moving any obstructions such as furniture from them to facilitate ease of movement for anyone in a wheelchair, walker or mechanical mobility devices, like a scooter chair. Also remember to remove all area rugs and floor mats since those are notorious culprits in slip and falls and act as irritating obstacles to any wheelchairs attempting to achieve firm and safe traction with flooring.

Most elderly family members might also like to congregate in the kitchen and even offer to help or want to help in the preparation of the festivity meals. To make them feel at home and at ease in offering, try to provide some counter space that is lower for them to work at. This can be achieved by placing a lower table, even a folding card table, at the end of a central island so that they can pull their wheelchair or seat up to it, have enough knee clearance and lend a helping hand. Another great quick fix is to use a pull-out bread board and have them work off that. Remember sometimes a sit down work surface is in fact appealing to anyone who might be performing repetitive actions like cutting or rolling — be they able-bodied or dealing with a mobility challenge.

Now that the meal is prepared, family and friends will gather around the dining table to share those special moments of communing and partaking in the fabulous feast. Ah but have we pre-planned where our guests who use wheelchairs are going to sit? Given the fact that most dining tables, especially those with an apron, do not usually have enough knee clearance, we should probably arrange to have the table raised to provide a minimum of 27 inches of clear knee space below. This can be tricky since whatever we do to raise the table must ensure that the table is stable and secured in place.

After the meal is done, we may find some will retire to the closest living room or lounge and for that area of the room to be accommodating you might want to remove any coffee or side tables that make maneuverable pathways narrow or difficult to get around. I can’t tell you how many times I have knocked my shin against a heavy coffee table as I plumped down on a deep sofa after stuffing myself on turkey. Oh yeah and speaking of that, make sure that all your seating options are not overly soft and unsupported since some of your guests might be elderly and need the support of a firm seat and arms on a chair to safely sit down and stand up as they eventually make their way to the closest bathroom.

This brings us to the next area of the home that needs some pre-planning and attention. Make sure that at the very least the toilet seat is user-friendly by installing a plastic riser seat which you can get from any local DIY, drug or hardware store. While at the store you can also get yourself some temporary grab bars that can be connected to the toilet or seat and provide the needed short term support. At your sink area, make sure that you have towels close to the front, perhaps on a floor-standing towel ring, and also tilt the mirror forward a little if you can to insure it is not too high for use by those who might be in a wheelchair or elderly who have limited movement in their neck, back and shoulders.
Some of your mobility-challenged guests might also be staying overnight and will need some prepared area to bath and sleep. In the case of the bathing, assuming you don’t have a no-curb shower already in your home, simply add a removable transfer bench, preferably with some grab bar supports to a tub or shower and replace or add a hand held shower head to help control the flow and direction of the water while bathing. These are available at your local hardware store.

At last, everyone is turning in for the night after a day of freedom of mobility and fun festivities. Your special guests have their sleeping accommodations all ready for them with their beds raised on similar blocking as the dining table to facilitate transferring from their wheelchairs. The beds are also pushed apart to allow maximum maneuverability and visit-ability as the day draws to a close and everyone settles in for the night.

Oh yes and better put the holiday cookies on the lower counter space in the kitchen just in case Santa decides to leave his sleigh at home this year and make his deliveries from the back of a Rascal Turnabout Electric mobility chair! After all he is aging gracefully too, you know.

 
About the Author: Raad Ghantous is the principal of Raad Ghantous & Associates and is an expert in luxury hospitality, wellness centers, and medical & day spa developments. He is also the owner of Your Home For A Lifetime, an A.D.A/ Barrier-free/ Universal design/Aging in place, full service design/build firm with over 15 years of experience specializing in developing integrating elegant and seamless designs/modifications to new or existing structures.
 

The Holidays Are Coming – Visitability – Part 2

Holiday Visits With Seniors and Elderly Loved Ones in Seattle and Bellevue, Washington

The holiday season is an ideal opportunity to check up on your aging parents.  Here is a great article from agingcare.com.  Visit us at www.andelcare.com for help with an aging loved one.  

Holiday Visits: A Time When Adult Children May Notice a Decline with Their Aging Parents

As the holidays approach, many long distance caregivers are now planning visits to their aging loved ones – perhaps the first opportunity in several months to personally observe older relatives. 

And the number of caregivers considered long distance is significant. According to a study conducted by the National Alliance of Caregiving, in collaboration with AARP, 15% of the estimated 34 million Americans who provide care to older family members live an hour or more away from their relative.

Continue reading HERE: 

Networking at the Rainier Club

Recently I had the opportunity to help celebrate the 6th anniversary of the Rainier Club’s Executive Women’s Group.  A discussion was led by Cathi Hatch, President and CEO of the angel investment group Zino Society, about the importance of “Active Networking” at their monthly Roundtable Breakfast. The Executive Women’s Group is a monthly gathering of civic, community, and business leaders, that come together for an opportunity to network and discuss relevant topics impacting professional life.  We discussed barriers to networking, tips and tricks of successful networking, follow up options after meeting new people, social media networking, and networking “don’ts”.

In the photo, I am pictured with Sharon Cooper, Colleen McCann and Cathi Hutch.