Wii, Wii for Caregivers and Alzheimer’s Patients
January 16, 2009 by Mary Emma Allen
Filed under Diseases & Conditions
Become Fit with Wii
We’ve begun to get fit with the Wii Fitness program my daughter received for Christmas. She was recovering from a long illness whereby she spent much time in bed and thus experienced physical fitness loss. Someone suggested to her husband that a Wii Fitness program might be helpful since this wasn’t the kind of weather (2 to 3 feet of snow on the ground) for outside exercise in New Hampshire.
Then once we joined the Wii fitness revolution, I’ve begun reading and hearing about it everywhere. So many people are enjoying it because you don’t have to go outside the …read more
Is Alzheimer’s a “Closet” Disease?
October 29, 2008 by Mary Emma Allen
Filed under Diseases & Conditions
Closet Disease
Keeping one’s illness, when it involved mental or emotional conditions, “in the closet” was common when I was growing up. You only whispered about someone’s mental disorders. Families tried to keep that person at home, while not literally “in a closet,” figuratively so.
You tried not to talk about Aunt Mollie who laughed at inappropriate times, wore her clothes backward, took walks in the middle of the night, or held conversations with people of the past. Perhaps she even had to spend some time in a mental institution and have “shock” treatment, the common way of dealing with mental and …read more
A Drawing & a Survey for Minding Our Elders
June 30, 2008 by Mary Emma Allen
Filed under Diseases & Conditions
AlzheimersNotes.com
Check out Carol Bradley Bursack’s blog and learn how to enter a drawing for her book, Minding Our Elders: Caregivers Share Their Personal Stories. You’ll need to take a survey about caregiving, but it’s easy and quick.
Then your name will be entered into the random drawing for one of ten copies of Carol’s book.
(c)2008 Mary Emma Allen
Balancing Alzheimer’s Caregiving & Your Job
June 16, 2008 by Mary Emma Allen
Filed under Diseases & Conditions
AlzheimersNotes.com
Jugging caregiving of an Alzheimer’s family member with working at a job outside the home becomes a great challenge to many.
The income is needed while the care for one’s parent or spouse increases. What are we to do?
Carol Bradley Bursack mentions The Employed Caregiver on her blog, Minding Our Elders and refers us to a very informative article on this topic, Caregiving Issues and the Workplace at AgingCare.com .
Caregivers are the most effective and efficient [at home and in the workplace] when they arm themselves with as much information as possible about their aging loved one’s current situation- both financial …read more
Alzheimer’s Caregivers – Tips on Avoiding Injuries
May 19, 2008 by Mary Emma Allen
Filed under Diseases & Conditions
AlzheimersNotes.com
Caring for Alzheimer’s patients often involves lifting, holding someone who can’t walk well, moving someone. Much of this activity often results in back injuries.
Carol Bradley Bursack has an informative article, Caregiver Injuries: Avoid Them, at her Minding Our Elders site.
Caregivers often need to learn how to lift and do many other things for those they care for. Sometimes, we can do it alone, sometimes we can’t.
She also refers to an article by Denise Clark, Preventing Injuries Among Caregivers.
I was fortunate that I didn’t experience injuries when caring for Mother and Auntie. But there were instances when this might have …read more
Protecting Alzheimer’s Patients from Contractor Fraud
April 9, 2008 by Mary Emma Allen
Filed under Diseases & Conditions
AlzheimersNotes.com
One of my fears, as my mom became less capable of making decisions and more susceptible to suggestions of strangers, was the possibility of her getting caught in contractor or other type of fraud. For some reason, at a certain age or stage of Alzheimer’s, parents often resent taking suggestions from their children, especially advice concerning financial and health matters.
My husband Jim, who was a contractor, began making needed repairs to Mother’s house and put new shingles on the roof. She didn’t understand why she needed a new roof even though the old was leaking into the attic space.
We lived 275 …read more




