Pet Ownership for Older Adults – Charlotte Today – October 14, 2019

pet ownershipPet Ownership for Older Adults – Charlotte Today – October 14, 2019

October is Adopt-A-Shelter-Dog Month. The ASPCA (American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) sponsors this event to promote the adoption of dogs from local shelters. Approximately 3.3 million dogs enter shelters every year.

Owning a pet seems like a good idea especially for isolated seniors. Let’s go one better. Owning a dog may help you maintain a healthy heart, especially if that pet is a dog, according to a new study published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Innovations, Quality & Outcomes.

“In general, people who owned any pet were more likely to report more physical activity, better diet and blood sugar at ideal level,” says Andrea Maugeri, Ph.D., a study researcher. “The greatest benefits from having a pet were for those who owned a dog, independent of their age, sex and education level.” So consider pet ownership!

GIS Caregiver Services for Organizations and Health Providers

GIS Caregiver Services for Organizations and Health Providers

Chances are you have a caregiver in your workplace. Since six out of ten people employed are caregivers so it makes sense right. Caregiving is a social determinant of health, just as important as socio-economic status, transportation, food insecurity, transportation, and education. Caregiver solutions are more than just offering time off for employees. If you are interested in a holistic, comprehensive solution for your employees, patients, and family caregivers, check out this video I put together about solutions from Global Institutional Solutions. We are serving close to six million caregivers.

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Dorothy the Organizer is participating in the Caregiver Smile Summit

Dorothy the Organizer is participating in the Caregiver Smile Summit

Dorothy is participating in the Caregiver Smile Summit.

“Dorothy The Organizer” is America’s Most Innovative Professional Organizer. Known to millions as the fearless-yet-endearing problem solver on the Emmy-nominated TV show on A&E, “Hoarders.” Dorothy is also the best-selling author of five books, including her latest, Stuff Your Face or Face Your Stuff.

In addition to being featured in the Wall Street Journal, Forbes and O Magazines, Dorothy appears regularly on the Today Show, the Dr. Phil Show, the VIEW, The Doctors, QVC and PBS. Dorothy lives with her husband in Los Angeles.

Owner of three companies, Dorothy is the creator of the “Cancer Concierge” on-line video system which helps individuals conquer their clutter in a pleasing and fun way, as well as the most trusted cloud based system, “Digital Lifecloud,” and her own “DorothyTheOrganizer” Professional Organizing Services.

Dorothy is a member and lecturer for the National Association of Professional Organizers (past national board member and past Los Angeles President) and Institute for Challenging Disorganization and is a highly sought-after international speaker who energizes and inspires her audiences to produce results and take immediate action. Dorothy is also a spokesperson, contributor and influencer for Zillow.com, Huffington Post, NetNanny.com, Sparefoot.com, 1800Flowers.com, and Microsoft.

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Her topic is: Organizing Your Life Around Your Values

Find out more about the Caregiver Smile Summitwww.caregiversummit.org 

4 THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN LEVERAGING TECHNOLOGY FOR AGING IN PLACE

aging in place

4 THINGS TO CONSIDER WHEN LEVERAGING TECHNOLOGY FOR AGING IN PLACE

BY  •  Reprinted from Sixty and Mew  •  CAREGIVING

Over the three years of our Caregiver Smile Summit, we have had leading experts speak about how technology can assist aging in place. In this article, we look at what they are seeing and what you should be incorporating for aging in place safely.

Laurie Orlov, founder of Aging in Place Technology Watch, said it best that, with few exceptions, every five years technology changes.

It is important to be able to safely stay in your home and also avoid social isolation. We have written previously about aging in place specialists who can come into the home, even virtually, and go room to room and tell you what needs to be changed or modified. Conversely there is often a technology solution that helps.

Safety Issues

According to Orlov, personal emergency response pendants have withstood the test of time and have also grown to be able to detect falls, detect your voice, and more.

Wearables, think Apple Watch and Fitbit, are becoming ‘smarter’ and also essential. There are so many smart devices that can help monitor your health that it would take a book to document!

Lisa Cini, Founder, President, and CEO of Mosaic Design Studio, has an amazing website – Best Living Tech – that showcases technology in these categories: home, health, memory, companion, fitness and vision/hearing. She had a great analogy.

Smart technology is like Alfred the Butler in Batman. Always in the background. Never obtrusive. There when you need him!

One of the trends she sees is smart lighting, which allows you to program the lights in your house to come on based on sensing. And you do it from an app. Think of what a great help that would be for older people who get up in the middle of the night to use the bathroom!

There is also Circadian Smart Lighting where the temperature of the lights adjusts naturally to keep your body in its natural rhythm.

For your bathroom you can buy bidet toilet seats to assist with hygiene. Bidets, popular in Europe, may yet be in fashion! They may not be what you think of as tech but the fact that they can be installed on an existing toilet is pretty savvy!

Induction looping is another trend Cini has spotted. A hearing loop is a special type of sound system for use by people with hearing aids.

The hearing loop provides a magnetic, wireless signal that is picked up by the hearing aid. It cuts out unwanted background noise though you need to use a receiver/headset. Better hearing leads to better health.

Of course, induction cooking (cooking without fear) allows the unit to detect whether cookware is placed on it and shuts down the element if a pot is not there or not large enough. The stovetop stays cool: no burned fingers or hands. And no house fires leaving burners on.

Getting Places

When you need to go somewhere, we know it’s getting easy. Not self-driving-cars easy but cars driven by someone else, certainly. Uber and Lyft are developing specialized senior services.

Niche companies like SilverRide provide an assisted ride service that picks you up from any location and transports you safely and securely all the way to your final destination. Food delivery to the home is becoming very popular.

Relieving Social Isolation

To me, one of the advantages of senior living facilities is the ability to socialize. Senior isolation is pervasive. Still, even the home-bound can prevent isolation. Certainly, social media has helped engage people via video chats on a number of platforms.

Virtual reality devices like Oculus can put you in the middle of a new experience without leaving home. Hasbro’s Joy for All Companion Pets gives you all of the benefits of having a pet without the burdens. I stream live concerts to people in their homes. You get the idea.

AI Voice Activated

Probably the biggest tech development is voice activated technology like Alexa and Google Home. I am working with a company called Brio that has an app specifically designed to help caregivers, engage the end user, and help prevent social isolation.

Listen to music, receive reminders, listen to a book… the skills developed and being developed are sometimes bigger than our imagination. My fitness tracker is connected directly to Alexa. Go figure. I can provide input to it and also review my progress from it.

So, if you are apprehensive about aging in place, at least know that one part of the equation, technology, is developing rapidly. It can keep you safe at home, help engage your mind, relieve isolation, and increase your happiness.

Our Friday Song of the Week-Woodstock – Strawberry Fields

woodstock

Our Friday Song of the Week – Woodstock – Strawberry Fields

After seeing Santana in Charlotte my wife and I were inspired to have a Woodstock party. Not taking my duties lately, I found the Woodstock lineup and all the songs that were performed. I took it upon myself to try to learn at least one or two songs from each artist at Woodstock in the order of appearance. Some artists or songs were so obscure that I had to skip them or I simply did not know the songs. For some artists I didn’t care for the songs that they did at Woodstock so I did another one of their songs that they made famous after Woodstock. I figured it was only appropriate to rehearse in my garage and to tape the rehearsal as opposed to going into my more polished studio and hooking up everything to my sound system on my computer. So what you’re seeking and hearing is my replication of our version of Woodstock complete with the garage band feel, me in jeans and a T-shirt and unshaven. Please pardon the surroundings, but I thought it would add some authenticity, but I hope you enjoy the songs. So here’s one by Richie Haven, the opening act. He did two Beatle’s covers. This one is Strawberry Fields.

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