Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Singer Etta James will remain hospitalized for several days 
Etta James, the legendary rhythm and blues singer suffering from end-stage leukemia and dementia, is under sedation while being treated at a Riverside hospital, her son said Saturday.
The 73-year-old performer, known for hits such as "At Last" and "Tell Mama," will remain hospitalized for at least several days before possibly returning to her Riverside home, Donto James said. If doctors can wean her from her sedation by Sunday, her family will try to hold a small Christmas celebration in her hospital room, he said.She always felt Christmastime was for the children," he said of his mother's seven grandchildren. "The biggest thing she ever wanted was for people to be with her, eat with her. That's what she wanted."
Donto James said he wanted to thank his mother's many fans for their expressions of concern and to tell them that "she is still fighting. That's the thing, my mother is still fighting."
He declined to confirm reports that his mother has been on a breathing apparatus since Monday, but said she is being treated "for a couple of issues."
He and his stepfather, Artis Mills, had been embroiled in a legal dispute over her care and control of her $1-million estate. Under a recent agreement with Donto James and his brother, Sametto James, Mills will remain as conservator of her estate. But a Riverside County Superior Court judge on Monday released only $350,000 for her medical costs, less than the $500,000 that Mills had requested.

If you are looking for the right place for your Mom we can help point you in the right Direction.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

 

'Body Clock' Might Affect Women's Dementia Risk

Timing of daily physical activity was also linked to odds for mental decline, study found

December 13, 2011 RSS Feed Print

TUESDAY, Dec. 13 (HealthDay News) -- An older woman's sleep/wake cycle and levels of physical activity may affect her risk of developing dementia, a new study suggests.
It found that the risk of dementia or "mild cognitive impairment" (a state that sometimes precedes dementia) was higher in older women with weaker circadian rhythms who are either less physically active or more active later in the day, compared to those who have a stronger circadian rhythm and are more active earlier in the day.
"We've known for some time that circadian rhythms, what people often refer to as the 'body clock,' can have an impact on our brain and our ability to function normally," lead author Greg Tranah, a scientist at the California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute, said in an institute news release.
"What our findings suggest is that future interventions such as increased physical activity or using light exposure interventions to influence circadian rhythms, could help influence cognitive [mental] outcomes in older women," he explained.
Tranah and colleagues analyzed data from almost 1,300 healthy women, over age 75, who were followed for five years. At the end of that time, 15 percent of the women had developed dementia and 24 percent had some form of mild cognitive impairment (MCI).
Women with weaker circadian rhythms who had lower levels of physical activity or who were most active later in the day were 80 percent more likely to develop dementia or MCI than those with stronger circadian rhythms who were active earlier in the day, the team found.
"To our knowledge this is the first study to show such a strong connection between circadian activity rhythm and the subsequent development of dementia or MCI," Tranah said. The finding marks an association only, however, and cannot prove cause-and-effect.
"The reasons why this is so are not yet clear," he added. "The changes in circadian rhythm may directly influence the onset of dementia or MCI, or the decrease in activity may be a consequence, a warning sign if you like, that changes are already taking place in the brain. Identifying what the reason is could help us develop therapies to delay, or slow down, the development of brain problems in the elderly."
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
If you are looking for the right place for your Mom we can help point you in the right Direction.

Assisted living southern california
 
www.assistedlivingsoutherncalifornia.com
Call Now!!!
1-855- 4ELDER6
or
1-855 435-3376
One of our experienced Placement Care Specialist are waiting by the phone to help your loved ones 24 hours a day.
Assisted Living Southern California
www.assistedlivingsoutherncalifornia.com





 
 
 
We want you to feel like you are apart of the family
Come join us!




 7025 Mountain ave
Highland , Ca 92346
(909)864-2901







Your Parents Deserve the Best

Thornhill Estate
121 Brisa Drive,
Palm Desert, CA 92211
(760) 200-0291













Looking for a place who cares?
Well here we are!



Hovley Care Services


40890 Hovley Court
Palm Desert ,Ca 92260
(760)346-3703

Thursday, December 8, 2011


Agencies consider future with senior services cuts

Lori Gilbert
The successful lawsuit by Disability Rights California and other groups to stop the state from eliminating funding for Adult Day Health Care Services, an optional benefit for poor and elderly citizens, has no direct impact on San Joaquin County.
There is no such facility, paid equally by Medicare and Medical, which provides medical care, physical therapy, exercise, counseling, socialization and other support to qualified adults, in the county. The only day care service of any type is Lodi's Adult Day Services Center at Hutchins Street Square, which serves those with Alzheimer's and dementia but is not licensed for medical care, or physical or speech therapy.
What the lawsuit - to restore funding in the state budget for the facilities that care for 37,000 people a day - does, though, is illustrate the potential state and federal budget cuts aimed at the senior population.
"Although we don't have a program, for me and our agency it sends a sign," said Dean Fujimoto, deputy director of aging and community services for San Joaquin County's Human Services Agency. "Although we know the state is in a budget crisis like most localities, this is an indication of the direction the state is headed, with proposed cuts to medical and other social aid programs, including programs directly affecting seniors."
The proposed state budget for 2012-13, Fujimoto said, will realign programs so that his agency's Adult Protective Services will be funded by the federal government and In-Home Support Services will be supported by the state.
"It fits into (2010 Affordable Care Act passed by Congress) and it's a clear indication by the federal government and the state of a move toward managed care programs," Fujimoto said. "That's the model. Our concern, at the local level, is there are specific local issues, and each county agency is better equipped for knowing the needs of the community."
That concern was repeatedly expressed at a Senior Health Policy Forum in San Francisco last week addressed by federal, state and Bay Area county representatives and attended by health care workers and other providers of senior services. Managed care health programs can take care of medical needs, service providers point out, but they may not be equipped to handle the social services seniors depend on, or provide the support services for families taking care of senior adults.
"The bottom line is that on the health care side of things you can justify dollars and cents as opposed to services," said Annette DePauli, unit chief for the San Joaquin Department of Aging. "The current social services model has you put money out to help people and hope it helps. In the health care model you can say you applied $400,000 here and got this many hours of service that prevented them from going to a nursing home and saved $1.5 million. It's more measurable. Managed care focuses on medically based needs and won't be attending to psychological, social and emotional caregiver needs. It will be medically focused. The danger is it will lose the humanness."
Drastic change appears to be coming to senior care, but the picture is hazy, colored in California by the recent fight to retain Adult Day Health Care facilities, which ended with those facilities not closing Dec. 1 as planned but remaining open though February 2012 and then shifting to Community-Based Adult Services on March 1.
"There are three things we can learn from the ADHC issue," Joanne Handy, the CEO of Aging Services of California, which represents nonprofit senior living facilities, said at the San Francisco event. "One is that the unthinkable can happen in this environment. Two, it showed when providers get together with consumers who benefit from the service, that it has an impact, and third, when people like Disabilities Rights Group, (California Association for Adult Day Cares) and scores of other human service organizations get together, we can make a difference."
Working together will be essential as agencies move forward to provide services in this fiscally frightening time. Human Services in San Joaquin County already partners with other agencies. Catholic Charities, for example, receives most of the agency's funding for in-home services.
Assistance from nonprofits won't just continue. The role of nonprofits will expand, Fujimoto said.
"I see grant applications that come out and I send them to staff and more times than not, we can't apply because we're a government agency," Fujimoto said. "You need to be a nonprofit agency to apply. If I can set up a nonprofit, whereby it's based on donations, we have some sort of board representative of the community and it's structured where the interest from donations, and not the principle, is allocated, we can offset county or federal or state cuts. It's tough for donors with the financial crisis. I'm a realist. I know I'm not going to set up a nonprofit and have some big donor come through. It will take work. In time it will benefit our agency as baby boomers age and those programs bridge the services we provide to keep them in their homes longer."
Keeping seniors out of institutional care as long as possible has been a federal objective since 1965.
"The Older American Act was passed for people to live in their homes with dignity as long as possible," DePauli said. "As a population, we voted on this, but it's slowly dwindling. The only way to survive is working with others in the community, knowing what others have and working together to fill the gaps. The county and nonprofits and organizations need to come together to survive and do the right thing in today's economy."
Services for seniors and their families continue to start with the Human Services Agency. A call to (209) 468-1104 or (800) 510-2020 is the place to start. A representative will evaluate an individual's situation, determine needed services and eligibility and direct him or her to the proper department or nonprofit group that can help.
Human Services Agency has extended its outreach not only to seniors but to the community at large by placing eligibility workers at two of its community centers with plans to place such workers at two additional centers in January and possibly all eight by July.
"Folks who need the services most but have transportation issues and might not be able to make it downtown can still have access to our service," Fujimoto said.
Funding cuts will continue to come, but his agency still has plans to reach out to those in need within the community and find a means to help them.
 


We want you to feel like you are apart of the family
Come join us!



Ambroise Manor
 7025 Mountain ave
Highland , Ca 92346
(909)864-2901







Your Parents Deserve the Best

Thornhill Estate
121 Brisa Drive,
Palm Desert, CA 92211
(760) 200-0291













Looking for a place who cares?
Well here we are!



Hovley Care Services

40890 Hovley Court
Palm Desert ,Ca 92260
(760)346-3703

Wednesday, November 30, 2011


We want you to feel like you are apart of the family
Come join us!




 7025 Mountain ave
Highland , Ca 92346
(909)864-2901







Your Parents Deserve the Best

Thornhill Estate
121 Brisa Drive,
Palm Desert, CA 92211
(760) 200-0291













Looking for a place who cares?
Well here we are!



Hovley Care Services

40890 Hovley Court
Palm Desert ,Ca 92260
(760)346-3703

Monday, November 7, 2011

Steve Lopez: Kicking the elderly when they’re down

Adult day care protest

What a sad, surreal scene in front of the state building on Spring Street on Monday afternoon -– senior citizen demonstrators on canes and walkers, and in wheelchairs too.
Their beef?
The adult day health care centers that have been a lifeline for them may have to shut down in a month because Gov. Jerry Brown whacked Medi-Cal funding, and these elders can't afford private facilities.
We've stooped this low, folks -- kicking the frail and elderly when they're down.
"I don't know what we're going to do," said Mary Lee Nelson, a wheelchair-bound 74-year-old who said she spends four or five days each week at a Downey facility.
The seniors came to the rally with nurses and relatives to raise their voices in support of the roughly 300 centers in California, which have about 35,000 clients. As many as 85-90% of the facilities will have to close, according to Lydia Missaelides of the California Assn. for Adult Day Services, because the bulk of their clients rely on Medi-Cal funding of $76 a day.
Missaelides said advocates are banking on a favorable decision in federal court in Oakland, where a judge is considering a legal challenge to maintain state funding and keep the centers open. A decision could be made within the next several days. Seniors take their meals at these centers, get physical therapy and other treatments, and keep up their social lives, with transportation to and from home for those who have no ride. When I wrote about the St. Barnabas center in Los Angeles in July, I met seniors with nowhere else to go and loved ones who said they'd have to quit their jobs and become caretakers if Barnabas was forced to close.
At today's rally, Arcila Garcia, 75, told me she'll miss going to the AltaMed Golden Age center in Lynwood, and Kimberly Gomez, an LVN there, told me she's going to be out of work beginning Dec. 2.
Novella Moore, a 97-year-old client at the Long Life center on West 48th Street in Los Angeles, sat in a wheelchair holding a sign that said: "I am 97 year [sic] old. I don't have any family. All I have is Long Life."
The owner of Long Life, John Hekimyan, said the cuts might save a few bucks in the short term but cost taxpayers more in the long run, and Susan Galeas of the Alzheimer's Assn. echoed his concerns. She said without close monitoring at the day care centers, more seniors are expected to end up in emergency rooms and nursing homes.
We all know times are tough and lots of sacrifices have to be made. But is this the kind of budget-trimming -- a Scrooge-like blow that's neither humane nor fiscally sound -– that anyone can support?


We want you to feel like you are apart of the family
Come join us!

7025 Mountain ave
Highland , Ca 92346
(909)864-2901







Your Parents Deserve the Best

Thornhill Estate
121 Brisa Drive,
Palm Desert, CA 92211
(760) 200-0291













Looking for a place who cares?
Well here we are!



Hovley Care Services

40890 Hovley Court
Palm Desert ,Ca 92260
(760)346-3703

Sunday, October 23, 2011




We want you to feel like you are apart of the family
Come join us!

7025 Mountain ave
Highland , Ca 92346
(909)864-2901







Your Parents Deserve the Best

Thornhill Estate
121 Brisa Drive,
Palm Desert, CA 92211
(760) 200-0291













Looking for a place who cares?
Well here we are!
40890 Hovley Court
Palm Desert ,Ca 92260
(760)346-3703

Ambroise Manor


Hovley Care Services

Tuesday, October 18, 2011








We want you to feel like you are apart of the family
Come join us!

7025 Mountain ave
Highland , Ca 92346
(909)864-2901







Your Parents Deserve the Best

Thornhill Estate
121 Brisa Drive,
Palm Desert, CA 92211
(760) 200-0291













Looking for a place who cares?
Well here we are!

Hovley Care Services
40890 Hovley Court
Palm Desert ,Ca 92260
(760)346-3703

Ambroise Manor

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Is Obama Jeopardizing Medicaid?



Is Obama Is Jeopardizing Medicaid?

Registered nurses hold signs as they strike outside of the Mills-Peninsula hospital on Sept. 22, 2011 in Burlingame, California. Tens of thousands of registered nurses held a strike at more than thirty hospitals to protest proposed cuts to benefits.
Enlarge Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Registered nurses hold signs as they strike outside of the Mills-Peninsula hospital on Sept. 22, 2011 in Burlingame, California. Tens of thousands of registered nurses held a strike at more than thirty hospitals to protest proposed cuts to benefits.
Registered nurses hold signs as they strike outside of the Mills-Peninsula hospital on Sept. 22, 2011 in Burlingame, California. Tens of thousands of registered nurses held a strike at more than thirty hospitals to protest proposed cuts to benefits.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Registered nurses hold signs as they strike outside of the Mills-Peninsula hospital on Sept. 22, 2011 in Burlingame, California. Tens of thousands of registered nurses held a strike at more than thirty hospitals to protest proposed cuts to benefits.
.
In one of its many attempts to get its budget deficit under control, in 2008 California decided to cut its reimbursement rates to medical providers for poor and disabled persons enrolled in the state's Medicaid program. The result was that providers began to cut back on services, and pharmacists stopped filling prescriptions because the reimbursements came to less than the cost of the drugs. California, for all intents and purposes, was no longer upholding the federal mandate to provide Medicaid patients with "meaningful access" to care. Numerous lawsuits were filed against the state to reverse the cuts, and they are now consolidated into Douglas v. Independent Living Center of Southern California, the first case the Supreme Court will hear today, on the first day of its new term.
As it stands, Douglas is no longer about Medicaid rates or "meaningful access," but whether Medicaid beneficiaries and providers have the right to sue the state to enforce federal Medicaid statutes — and, in a surprising move, the Obama administration has sided with California, with the Deputy Solicitor General arguing before the Court today that only the Department of Health and Human Services should be able to enforce compliance with Medicaid. "They want the prerogative of when and where to intervene in state conduct matters," says Sara Rosenbaum, a law professor and health care expert at George Washington University, venturing a guess as to the administration's motives. California's backers also worry about court-imposed payment schemes replacing state discretion, as well as a surge in litigation.
But the Obama administration's position is a big mistake. Not only would rolling back such private rights endanger patients and providers, it could also impede the administration's own agenda. Because the ability of the federal government to enforce its health care laws through HHS is limited, it often relies on private lawsuits to keep states in check. In fact, the success of the administration's signature policy achievement, the Affordable Care Act, could depend on exactly the kind of action it's trying to rule out.
OF THE 32 MILLION Americans the Obama administration's Affordable Care Act will eventually insure, almost half — 15 million — will gain insurance under a massive Medicaid expansion by January 2014. The impact of the ACA, in other words, depends on states complying with Medicaid requirements — the very laws Douglas could effectively end the ability of private citizens to enforce through legal action. Another scenario where you might see the ACA falter is if a state took over responsibility for running a health-care exchange, and then failed to comply with federal requirements in some way. A ruling against providers and beneficiaries in Douglas therefore "limits the options for enforcing the Affordable Care Act," says Timothy Jost, a law professor at Washington and Lee University School of Law. "At this point the assumption is that the states will implement it and that the federal government will enforce it. The possibility to enforce implementation [either through private actions or HHS] is a fall-back position. But in the future, particularly if Obama loses the 2012 election, it narrows options for making sure implementation goes through."

Even under a Democratic administration, however, leaving enforcement up to HHS is a disaster waiting to happen. That's because, historically, HHS has a middling record of enforcing Medicaid's rules. For instance, the California rate cuts that launched the lawsuit in question are still in effect, points out Rochelle Bobroff, Directing Attorney of the Federal Rights Project at the National Senior Citizens Law Center. "The federal government never goes to court over non-conforming state plans," says Bobroff. "They just don't do it." More importantly, HHS is largely limited to one, very poor enforcement mechanism: the ability to cut off all Medicaid funding to a noncompliant state. If the threat of a cutoff doesn't scare a state into compliance, following through would only end up hurting the Medicaid recipients HHS is trying to help. Under a president Bachmann or Perry and their HHS Secretary, says Jost, "you'd have a situation where [the ACA] was basically unenforceable with regard to the Medicaid expansion."

Moreover, the ACA is just one piece of the possible collateral damage from a ruling in favor of California. Under a broad ruling, a whole swath of federal requirements could be endangered. "Every state out there is waiting to see what happens in Douglas to cut access," says Rosenbaum. "The litany of what kind of bad state conduct could be unleashed is long because the only weapon against it is the risk of injunction. The theory that there's no right of action will carry over out of the Medicaid Act."

One area where states would likely begin to move in response to a victory for California is in cutting federal money — like Medicaid and Title X funding—that's currently directed to abortion clinics and Planned Parenthood. The ability of beneficiaries and providers to stop state laws seeking to defund clinics would likely be impeded, allowing backers of the proverbial "war" on abortion and contraception to score a major victory. And with an especially broad ruling, says Steven Shapiro, legal director for the ACLU, "there would be consequences for a wide-ranging variety for civil liberties and civil rights litigation [including] state and local immigration cases."
This all depends, of course, on if the state of California wins in Douglas, and then how broad the Court's ruling actually is. The poor tools at HHS's disposal are partly a result of the fact that the government has historically relied heavily on private actions to enforce federal laws. For this reason it seems unlikely that the Court will take away private citizens' cause of action altogether, as a broad ruling would overturn a large number of cases and go against decades of established jurisprudence. But on the other hand, a narrow ruling seems likely. "It's hard to be optimistic with 32 states and the federal government [on the other side]; this is going to be a difficult case to win," says Bobroff. "Given this Supreme Court and its hostility to plaintiffs," Jost notes, "it's depressing."

It's important to note that the Obama administration is taking a more moderate position and is asking the Court for a narrow ruling on the Medicaid Act alone. But its decision to back the state of California over private beneficiaries and providers is still baffling for heath care advocates and experts. Even a narrow ruling could impede the implementation of health care reform. "I have no idea what they were thinking, but it's a major disappointment," says Shapiro. "They went against their historic and the legally correct position." Indeed, when the Supreme Court was deciding whether to hear Douglas, the administration's position was that private actions were important to carrying out federal law. When the Court took up the case, however, the administration performed a remarkable about-face. "There's a huge amount riding on this case," says Rosenbaum, "and the ironies here are phenomenal."


We want you to feel like you are apart of the family
Come join us!
Ambroise Manor
7025 Mountain ave
Highland , Ca 92346
(909)864-2901







Your Parents Deserve the Best
Thornhill Estate
121 Brisa Drive,
Palm Desert, CA 92211
(760) 200-0291













Looking for a place who cares?
Well here we are!

Hovley Care Services
40890 Hovley Court
Palm Desert ,Ca 92260
(760)346-3703

Sunday, October 2, 2011







We want you to feel like you are apart of the family
Come join us!
Ambroise Manor
7025 Mountain ave
Highland , Ca 92346
(909)864-2901




 Your Parents Deserve the Best
Thornhill Estate
121 Brisa Drive,
Palm Desert, CA 92211
 (760) 200-0291





Looking for a place who cares?

Well here we are!
Hovley Care Services
40890 Hovley Court
Palm Desert ,Ca 92260
(760)346-3703



 

 

 

 

Elder-care is about more than duty. It’s the law

For the mother, it was an assumed truth: When she got old, one of her kids would take her in. As far as her five children were concerned, however, it was never going to happen, though they didn’t say so to her face. Not that she was a bad mother (if anything she loved her offspring too intensely). But did they want a sweet, docile granny living in the spare bedroom? Far from it.
“She’s too difficult,” says her daughter, Barb, a retired schoolteacher in Windsor, Ont. “She argues about everything and I seriously could not take that. I would be a basket case.”
But when her mom was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, there was no question of Barb’s role. Despite every screaming match in her teenaged years, and every gritted-teeth conversation in adulthood, this was still her mother. Her siblings helped out but, ultimately, it was Barb, the eldest, who went to her mom's house nearly every day, listened to her grouching, and patiently explained, for the hundredth time, why she couldn't drive any more.
“There were days I absolutely hated going there,” she says of daily visits to her mother’s house. “It wasn’t something I wanted to do. But it was the right thing for my mother and for me.”
What do adult children owe their parents, and how far do those obligations extend? Socrates and Plato pondered the question, philosophers have long debated it. A dusty law – left on the books in every province except Alberta, dating back to the Depression when social supports for the elderly were scant – says the state can enforce a financial duty on children to their poverty-stricken parents. (A proposed law in China would go even further, ordering children to regularly visit elderly parents.) Even if your parents don’t sue you, the question of obligation – moral, emotional and financial – is one more Canadians will encounter in a society with two converging complications: an aging and longer-living population, and families with fewer children, many of whom live too far away to share the load.
Filial law, as Queen’s University law professor Nick Bala observes, is a “legal oddity,” one that’s been used rarely in Canada, for obvious reasons: Good luck attempting a pleasant Christmas dinner with a child you took to court over a few bucks a month. (Prof. Bala, who like many legal scholars believes the law should be repealed, also points out that elderly parents are far more likely to be supporting their struggling kids, not the other way around.) In a now-infamous court case in British Columbia, a 73-year-old mother named Shirley Anderson has been fighting in the courts for 12 years to get parental support in the form of a monthly cheque from her children. Like any similar divorce court matter, it’s full of vitriol – the kids were brats, their mother was derelict. Last week, the children named in the case went to the British Columbia Supreme Court to ask for the case to be dismissed.
Filial laws also exist in a majority of U.S. states, leading to a few controversial cases where nursing homes have tried to chase down adult children to pay their parents’ outstanding bills. But the cases may be more complicated than a monthly stipend for dear old dad: In 2001, an Ontario man was sentenced to six months in prison for failing to provide his father with the “necessities of life.” The court was divided on the ruling – the father was found living in filth on the ground floor in their shared house, but he had also refused to go to a nursing home, and often stubbornly rejected his son’s help.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

The Unsung Heroes Of Elder Care!





The Unsung Heroes of Elder care!

It is important, however, to put elder abuse in context. Studies show that 60 million Americans provide care to adult relatives, with an average lifetime economic cost per person of $300,000, mostly from early retirement or reduced work hours. If the public paid for this, costs would be four times what the federal government now pays for long-term care.
The great majority of these caregivers do exemplary jobs, sacrificing free time, sleep and sometimes their own health. University research conducted by my colleagues and me as social scientistsalso shows that older people in residential-care settings describe both exemplary paid care providers and some who are mediocre or poor. 
This positive quality of care, however, is not newsworthy, and most news stories focus on the few, horrific cases where abuse or neglect leads to harm or death. In elder care, there are most certainly a few villains but many, many unsung heroes. 





Theres no place like home...

But we might have something better!!
Hovely Care Services
40890 Hovely court
Palm Desert, Ca 92260
(760)346-3703







Your Parents Deserve Better!
Thornhill Estate LLC
121 Brisa Drive, Palm Desert, CA 92211-0779 (760) 200-0291








Looking for someone who cares
We Do!
Ambroise Manor
7025 Mountain ave
Highland ca 92346
(909) 864-2901







Tuesday, September 6, 2011







Youngstown
Gailor Blake, 88, opened the door to his Austintown home at 9 a.m. to welcome Terri Zarlingo with a bright smile.
“She’s like family,” Blake said, as Zarlingo, a driver for Celtic Healthcare’s hot- meals delivery program, arrives.
Once Zarlingo finishes her short, friendly discussion with Blake, she sets his meal out and leaves. She may be the last person Blake — one of the last survivors of his own family — sees that day unless neighbors visit.
Many independent-living seniors in the Mahoning Valley face similar situations: They live alone with no one to check on them but social workers or home-nurse aides.
Other senior citizens do not receive home-visit services at all.
Several organizations in Youngstown and Mahoning, Trumbull and Columbiana counties provide services for the area’s aging population, but no overarching agency exists to centralize these services and standardize the well-being of the Mahoning Valley’s independent senior citizens.
Youngstown Councilwoman Annie Gillam thinks the city could benefit from a central agency.
Gillam, D-1st, said accounting for every person in the city may not be possible, but getting involved with programs through churches and area agencies could prove beneficial to better inform elderly citizens about available services.
Older adults living alone with no one to check on them could be in danger, said Alan Bayowski, gerontologist and director of the Shepherd Foundation, an affiliate of Shepherd of the Valley, which provides senior services in the Valley.
Should a senior fall or become too ill to seek treatment, that person could be left alone for days or even weeks, he said.
Lisa Solley with the Area Agency on Aging 11 Inc., Niles, said most older citizens want to stay in their homes, but they need some assistance.
Her agency collects federal, state and local funds and then distributes them to local providers in Ashtabula, Trumbull, Mahoning and Columbiana counties. Those providers then help those who qualify for services.
Solley said most people who request services might not qualify for funds, but the agency still tries to link them up with appropriate services. If no state funding is available, federal programs can sometimes be used, she said.
Ohio’s citizens and service organizations face the challenge of no state funding for citizens above the poverty line.
Organizations such as Celtic Healthcare, 3530 Belmont Ave., provide food, home-health aides and transportation for qualifying adults over 60 through grants.
Other federal funds provide services such as air-conditioning units for households in need. Solley said this service was used by AAA11 clients more recently in the high-temperature conditions last month.
Extreme weather conditions exacerbate danger when ice on the drive between the door and mailbox causes the senior citizen to slip or high heat affects pre-existing medical conditions such as breathing problems or congestive heart failure.























Choices: Understanding and preventing elder abuse

After a lifetime of hard work and responsibility to others, the latter years of our lives should be the “golden years.” Unfortunately, for many, that is not the case.
Each of us is aware of an elder adult for whom we feel compassion. We may have observed that he/she appears confused and conclude that s/he may have dementia or the beginnings of Alzheimer’s disease. She complains of repeated broken bones and frequently has bruises. Her children do not call or visit. Even former friends avoid her, which in itself, is a form of abuse. Instead, turn your compassion into understanding. It will help you learn how to take proactive steps to improve the life of an older person instead of avoiding him.
Why should you care? You should get involved, because it could happen to you. Elder abuse is an under recognized problem with devastating, and even life threatening, consequences. The National Center on Elder Abuse, a division of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, estimates that more than 500,000 older people are abused each year and that number is growing.
Elder abuse can occur anywhere; in the home, in nursing homes, or other institutions. It affects seniors across all socio-economic groups, cultures and races. Research indicates that more than one in 10 elders may experience some type of abuse, but only one in five cases are reported. Why? Because many of us just don’t want to get involved.
“Elder abuse” refers to intentional or neglectful acts by a caregiver or “trusted” individual that lead to, or may lead to, harm of a vulnerable elder. This includes physical abuse; neglect; emotional or psychological abuse; verbal abuse and threats; financial abuse and exploitation; sexual abuse; and abandonment. Self-neglect is also considered mistreatment.
Physical abuse includes the use of force to threaten or physically injure a vulnerable elder. Abused elders may have slap marks, unexplained bruises, pressure marks, and certain types of burns or blisters, such as cigarette burns.
Emotional abuse, perhaps the most devastating to the human spirit, includes verbal attacks, threats, rejection, isolation or belittling actions that cause mental anguish, pain or distress to a senior. Children and other close relatives may refuse to visit an older parent if they “don’t behave.” Visitation with grandchildren may be denied (article to follow).
      


                                 
Looking for a place for your parents can be hard.....

We can help

 

 

Thornhill Estate

121 Brisa Drive

Palm Desert, CA 92211

(760) 200-0291

 

 

 

Feature – Funding care for the elderly


The Dilnot Commission Report on the funding of care and support for older and disabled people is still attracting considerable debate. Ian Atkinson from Retirement Solutions takes us back over Dilnot’s recommendations and what it means for the mortgage lending industry, in particular equity release
The Commission on Funding of Care and Support recently released its findings on the current provision of care for elderly and infirm adults in England. Set up by the coalition government last year, the Commission was tasked with analysing the current system of care provision - a system that many feel is out-dated and unfair. Not only do people feel they are incorrectly assessed under the care system, they also feel it was not designed to cater for an ageing population.
As many as 10 per cent of English people will need care at some point in their lives, and as many as 90 per cent of those people would lose most of their assets under the current care system. The report stressed that a lack of awareness and clear information and support, meant that many people in need of care are losing almost their entire life savings. In many cases, this occurs with little or no warning. The Commission also states that people in different areas of the country experience very different care provision, with a wide variation in the quality of information they receive. Current users of the care system in England feel that they are not adequately protected against unexpected care costs, which can run into tens of thousands of pounds. This sudden financial drain can come as a shock to many people, especially those who incorrectly assume the NHS covers all care costs.
While the report began on an upbeat note, “it is a matter for celebration that people are living for longer.” The gloom soon descended when you see in black and white the scale of the issue and why it simply can’t just be brushed under the carpet. In the UK alone, there are currently around 400,000 elderly in residential care, and with this number predicted to nearly double to 750,000 in 2031 and more than triple to 1.5 million by 2081, we all now need to be made to take an element of responsibility for provision of care in our later life.
Means tests
At present, thousands of elderly people have to either use up nearly all of their savings or sell their homes in order to pay for care as currently, any financial support from the council is means tested. This means that anyone who has assets valued over £23,250 is expected to fund the majority of their care bill. The report suggests a higher limit for means-tested state support. This would result in a fairer system, which provides more safeguards to people in care, but at a cost of £1.7 billion to the taxpayer. The report also suggests that a new funding system could open up new financial markets to insurers and mortgage providers.
The key suggestion in the report is to cap the contribution of any individual at £35,000. The limit for means testing would also be raised from £23,250 to £100,000. This would reduce asset loss from 90 per cent to 30 per cent. Anyone who develops a care need before reaching adulthood would not be expected to pay anything at all.
Insurance
One of the key criticisms of the current care system was that people are unable to plan ahead, or are unaware of the enormous cost of care beforehand. Along with an awareness campaign, the Dilnot Report suggests highlighting the importance of saving for old age, and emphasises the opportunity to develop new financial products to insure people against the cost of care. At present, there are no pre-funded insurance products in the market which could assist with the cost of care, simply because the risk is so difficult to define. Once new caps are in place, the Commission believes that products could be developed to spread or cover these new, clearly defined cost boundaries. A government awareness campaign could greatly increase the amount of people willing to consider alternative financial products to protect against unexpected accident or illness in the future.
There are three main areas where the report suggests new products could coincide with the new care system. The Commission on Funding of Care and Support suggests the adaptation of current life insurance policies to incorporate provision for care as a policy benefit, or provide a cash back scheme for living costs in care. Annuities could also be adapted to reduce regular payments, but pay out much more if a care need or disability develops later. This is a product the chair of the Commission, Andrew Dilnot, particularly would like to see.
With the current means testing limit of £23,250, most people have no choice but to spend their entire housing assets on care. If the overall cost of care is lower, and thresholds and means testing is altered accordingly, more people may choose to stay in their home, rather than move into residential care, and release the equity in the property, rather than selling it outright.
Equity release
The report suggests that equity release products could continue to play a key role in helping people to release sufficient funding from their home without having to move out. The benefits of this would cascade down to family and carers, and would mean that the stress of illness could be reduced to some extent. Equity release could therefore become a very popular way for elderly people to pay for their care needs without losing the familiarity of their own family environment.
The Commission on Funding of Care and Support suggests that new mortgage products could be produced specifically to provide for situations where equity release is the best solution. Given that one of the key considerations of the report was to introduce protection against all assets being used when a property was sold to pay for care, this is likely to be one option which would increase in popularity if the reforms were brought in.
Changes in 2014
As yet, no decision has been made on the Dilnot Report. Prior to its release, many believed it would be rejected outright due to the cost of the plans to the state. Andrew Lansley, the health secretary, will publish a white paper in early 2012 in response to the report. Regardless of the decision, any changes to the current system would not be implemented until 2014.
Andrew Dilnot points out that the £1.7 billion required for the reformed care system would amount to just a quarter of one per cent of public spending as a whole, and as the reforms would not be brought in for two to three years, the economy would probably be in a better position to absorb the cost by the time the new rules were active.
Dilnot also asserted that there would be wide-ranging political implications of scrapping the recommendations in the report. He is keen to see better integration with the wider healthcare system, as well as the financial services industry as a whole, if and when the government approves the recommendations.
Current market
As the population grows older it is estimated that one in three people will require long-term care during their retirement with 40 per cent of these having to fund part or all of it themselves.
With around 25 per cent of people over the age of 65 facing care bills in excess of £50,000 and a further 10 per cent looking at a bill of over £100,000. The proposed cap would mean that these people would only have to pay £35,000 of their care bill and a capped amount of between £7,000 - £10,000 per annum toward general living costs such as food and heating if living in a residential home, before the government would step in to continue funding.
Perhaps rather surprisingly, current figures suggest that only 5 per cent of self-funders seek independent financial advice and therefore never get to find out about products such as immediate needs annuities or equity release.
Helping clients plan for old age and their long-term care is a complex process but as a result of the report, more products are sure to be made available. But one solution available immediately to fund care costs is an equity release mortgage.
Reviewing the providers
So has the Dilnot Report promoted a reverse in fortunes for the equity release market that was left devastated a few years back following the exit of some big name providers?
Back in April 2011, SHIP (Safe Home Income Plans), the trade body for equity release providers, which represents over 90 per cent of the equity release sector announced that the total advances in the first quarter of 2011 had fallen by 4 per cent to £181.6 million to 3,838 customers. However, while customer numbers and the value of the market fell, the average amount released was £47,323 – 4 per cent higher than Q4 2010 and in fact the highest average amount since Q4 2009. Although a decline, there was a cause for optimism given that lending was achieved with fewer providers.
The number of new equity release mortgages has declined by 30 per cent in the past three years with just over 20,000 in 2009. The main reason is that 10 of the 24 providers have withdrawn from the market in the same period leaving just 14 accepting new business.
The most notable provider to have left was Prudential who in 2008 had a 23 per cent share of the market reduce to just 12 per cent in 2009. It cited funding for the main reason for the withdrawal as well as the onset of the credit crunch, which ruined any hope of securing its mortgage book. Stonehaven and Hodge Lifetime closely followed the Prudential out of the market in 2010.
However, the sector now looks set to experience a revise in fortunes thanks to the release of the Dilnot Report. With Retirement Plus already confirmed as returning to the market later in 2011, and Stonehaven returning after a break of just one year, things could be looking up.
What the Dilnot Report will enable providers to do is design new or tailor existing products specifically for the care fees market. As the cap on the amount people are expected to pay has provided the transparency that simply hasn’t been there in the past. Andrea Rozario, director of SHIP, echoed Retirement Solutions’ optimism for the equity release market recently, by saying: “We are well on the way to a resurgence and we are looking to see more providers in the market and even some new names. It will not happen overnight, it will take a bit of time. It’s a case of watching this space.”
Among those rumoured to be carefully watching the market is Saffron Building Society after Stonehaven received “a really good response” to its relaunch, suggesting that a demand was there for the products, and Hodge Lifetime confirming that it too was “looking to refocus equity release and bring out new products in the next 12 to 18 months.” However, on the flip side, Prudential confirmed it has no plans to re-enter the UK equity release market, where at present the market is shared between four major players; Just Retirement, Aviva, LV= and Bridgewater.
What is guaranteed is that Dilnot’s observations, driven by an aging population with inadequate pension provision, will be a catalyst for providers to enter the market to meet future care funding needs.
Ian Atkinson is long term care expert and IFA at Retirement Solutions, an independent financial intermediary providing specialist advice for the over 55s







                   


We all Deserve a little fun ...
Come join us!!!

Ambroise Manor
7025 Mountain ave
Highland ca, 92346
(909) 864-2901












Looking for a little bit of heaven

Hovely Care Services
40890 Hovely Court
Palm desert, Ca 92260
760-346-3703