Monday, June 29, 2009

Playing With Our Grandchildren

Source: AARP.org | 2007-01-31 14:06:28.502620-05:00

Disclaimer: AARP.org does not share this information or keep it permanently, as it is for the sole purpose of sending this one time e-mail.

"Play with me, Grandma." "Let's play, Grandpa." What grandparent wouldn't jump at the chance to play again, after all these years? Sure, you may feel a bit out of practice. But if you follow these playful tips, you're bound to have some fun!

Follow Their Lead

The best play is pretty simple. It doesn't require much planning or equipment. Playing with a child doesn't mean going to the zoo or the movies. It's not about spending money or being an entertainer. It's about being a kid again.

The easiest way to play is to follow your grandchild's lead. Grandchildren are very good at playing. After all, it's what they do! You could learn a lot from them. Let your grandchildren teach you the game they just invented. Help them turn your backyard or living room into a fort, castle or ship. Your job is easy. All you have to do is go along for the ride.

Old-Fashioned Play Still Works

Computer games are a great way to share time with your grandchildren and to let them teach you how to play. But don't sell yourself short. You know a thing or two about games, too! Introduce your grandchildren to some of the old-fashioned games you played with your own children. They'll be a big hit!

Board games are a perfect example of old-fashioned play that still works. These games teach children how to take turns, how to count, and how to focus. Introduce your grandchildren to such classic games as Candy Land®, "Memory", and Chutes and Ladders®. These games are easy and fun to play. And they're perfect for kids and adults to play together. Every player has an equal chance of winning. That means you don't have to "let" your grandchildren win. When you win, take the opportunity to teach grandchildren how to accept defeat with grace.

Card games are another great way to have old-fashioned fun. A deck of cards is small and you can easily carry it wherever you go. Plus, there are card games for every age group. Start with "Go Fish" or "Old Maid". Then move on to UNO®. When you and your grandchild get really good, you can tackle more advanced games like "Solitaire," "Hearts," or "Canasta."

Fun on the Go

Most children stay active by playing organized sports or taking part in organized activities. These activities are a great way for kids to stay in shape. But youngsters still need some "disorganized" play in their lives. That's the kind of play that doesn't come with a clock, a rule book, or a need to win. Grandparents can show kids how to be active without the stress of competition. That's a lesson they'll keep with them for years to come.

You don't have to be a marathon runner to help your grandchildren stay active. Try taking a walk together. It's simple and easy on the body. And it's good for both of you. Walk your grandchildren around your neighborhood. Introduce them to your neighbors. Point out flowers and trees. Stop by the firehouse, police station, and bank. Ask for a similar tour the next time you are in your grandchildren's neighborhood.

There are lots of other ways to stay active while having fun. Fly a kite together. Play a game of badminton. Organize a game of hide-and-seek. Roll up the rug and dance to your favorite CD. Show your grandchild how to use a hoola hoop. Anything that involves moving your body will benefit you and delight your grandchildren.

Helping Grandchildren Play Alone

Do your grandchildren ever say, "There's nothing to do" or "I'm bored"? Do these statements make you want to rush in and organize an activity for them? Don't do it. Instead, take this opportunity to teach your grandchildren how to amuse themselves.

Always have a supply of arts and crafts materials on hand. Paper, crayons, stickers, glue, sparkles, and construction paper are easy to find and they don't cost much. These tools are a perfect way to end the "I'm bored" blues. You may have to offer a few suggestions for what grandchildren could make with your art supplies. But then you can step back and watch them play on their own. Stay close, just in case they need help. And be ready to praise their artwork.

Getting to Know You

When you play with your grandchildren, there's more going on than meets the eye. It may look like you're just flying a kite or playing cards. But you're also doing important work. You're learning about your grandchildren. And your grandchildren are learning about you. That sounds like lots of fun!

AARP Resources

  • How to Be the Greatest Grandparent Ever
    Celebrities describe how they drive bumper cars, catch fireflies and skip stones with their grandchildren.
  • Opportunities to Inspire Grandchildren Lurk Within Everyday Activities
    These tips will help you involve grandchildren in creative activities that are fun and educational.
  • Physical Activity for Adults Over 50
    Here's a wealth of articles about how to stay fit, on your own or with grandchildren.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Wii bowling knocks over retirement home

By Dave Wischnowsky |Tribune staff reporter
7:35 PM CST, February 16, 2007

At the Sedgebrook retirement community in Lincolnshire, where the average age is 77, something unexpected has been transpiring since Christmas. The residents, most of whom have never picked up a video game controller in their life, suddenly can't put the things down.

"I've never been into video games," said 72-year-old Flora Dierbach last week as her husband took a twirl with the Nintendo Wii's bowling game. "But this is addictive."

Dierbach said residents love the Wii set up in the clubhouse lounge.

"They come in after dinner and play," she said. "Sometimes, on Saturday afternoons, their grandkids come play with them.

"A lot of grandparents are being taught by their grandkids. But, now, some grandparents are instead teaching their grandkids."

The Wii has become so popular at Sedgebrook that on Sunday afternoon there will be a video game bowling tournament in the lounge. More than 20 residents have signed up to compete.

"We'll even have a fan for people to dry their hands before they bowl," said Dierbach, head of Sedgebrook's entertainment committee.

If the retirees in Lincolnshire are any proof, video games are no longer just kids' play.

And that's the whole idea, said Beth Llewelyn, Nintendo's senior director of corporate communications.

"We certainly appreciate our 'core' gamers and will continue to supply them with games," Llewelyn said.

"But the question is, how do you build a bigger audience?"

With an easy-to-use wireless controller that translates a player's motions onto the screen, Nintendo believes it has found the answer with the Wii.

"People have no fear of picking up a remote control, but they're hesitant to pick up a video game controller," Llewelyn said. "So the idea was to make the controller look like a remote control with just a couple of buttons."

Since the Wii hit stores in November, more than 1 million consoles have been sold in the United States, Llewelyn said. The reaction to the system by seniors has been a pleasant surprise.

On Sunday, Don Hahn, 76, a veteran of numerous real-life bowling competitions, will compete for the first time in a virtual one.

"This is pretty realistic. You can even put English on the ball," Hahn said after connecting on a strike with the Wii. "I used to play Pac-Man a little bit, but with this you're actually moving around and doing something.

"You're not just sitting there pushing buttons and getting carpal tunnel."

dwischnowsky@tribune.com

25 Quick Tips on How to Become More Active

1. Get a checkup
Meet with your healthcare provider to see whether you'll need to consider any special modifications before starting an exercise program.

2. Start slowly
Many people are eager to get started and sometimes overdo it, which usually makes them sore and can make them want to stop.

3. Make a date
Find a buddy to exercise with you and keep you motivated.

4. Set specific short- and long-term goals

5. Make a list
List the benefits you expect from your physical activity program, and then make sure they are realistic and reasonable.

6. Make choices
What are you willing to give up in order to make room for exercise? Bad habits? Nonproductive activities? Nonbeneficial relationships?

7. Every step counts
Wear a step counter throughout the day to count how many steps you take.

8. Keep moving all the time
Stretch, walk, march in place, stand and sit as many times possible when you're talking on the phone or during TV commercials.

9. Do your own house and yard work

10. Create a support network
Tell friends and family about your new goals and ask for their support and encouragement.

11. Know your challenges
List things that keep you from being active. Work on a solution for each challenge.

12. Exercise in a way that makes your muscles work harder over time
Your muscles will adapt to the exercise you are doing. To continue to build strength, gradually increase the intensity of your workout.

13. Join a class
Select an exercise class at your local health club,YMCA, JCC, hospital-based fitness program, city recreation program, or health club.

14. Wear the right shoes
Foot comfort and support is important for all impact physical activities.

15. Participate in charity events
Set a goal to participate in an event such as a walk, run or bike to raise money for a special cause.

16. Eat well
Good food gives your body the fuel it needs to stay active and function at its best. Choose foods wisely and try to pack in as many nutrients as you can.

17. If it hurts, don't do it
Work around pain, not through it.

18. Focus on the major muscle groups in the legs, chest and back

19. Do balance exercises, as well as strength exercises

20. Keep a journal
Record activities that have become easier to do in your life, as well as those that may be more difficult.

21. Make your car work for you
Park at the outer edges of store parking lots.

22. Take the stairs
Walk up the first flight of stairs in a high-rise, rather than waiting for the elevator. Add another floor every week.

23. Follow a well-rounded program
Include all four components of a successful program: stretching, endurance activities, strength training, and balance exercises. And remember to warm up and cool down.

24. Reward yourself
Once you've reached your goal, treat yourself to something that reminds you what a good job you've done and encourages you to continue.

25. Don't quit
Like brushing your teeth, make exercise part of your daily life.

Source: Adapted from the International Council on Active Aging's "ICAA offers 30 tips on how older adults can become more active"

Monday, June 22, 2009

Home Care Chain Arrives in Metro

An Arizona-based home-care company is moving into the Minneapolis/St. Paul area, with plans to sell up to a dozen franchises.

Synergy HomeCare's first Minnesota franchise opened in Woodbury in February. Brother and sister Percy and Angela Nelson spent $35,000 in personal funds to buy the territory, which covers an area northeast of St. Paul. They recently finished training roughly 30 workers to provide services ranging from getting groceries for seniors or disabled persons to bathing them and putting them in bed. Synergy does not provide medical care.

The Nelsons are now ready to find clients and are optimistic. "We've actually turned down clients. We wanted to get our staff hired, trained and ready to go before we started our major marketing efforts, " said Percy Nelson, a former Hamline University administrator.

A second franchise, owned by former Cutco Corp. district manager Mitch Bloom, is opening in Golden Valley. A third franchise, owned by Jim and Heather Zenk, is expected to open soon, serving communities including Bloomington, Edina and Minneapolis.

Peter Tourian, founder and CEO of Gilbert, Ariz.-based Synergy, said he sees promise in Minnesota. Synergy has about 70 franchises in 34 states and wants 100 by the end of the year.

Neil Johnson, executive director of the Minnesota HomeCare Association, said there's plenty of room for Synergy in the market. Demand will grow as baby boomers retire, but want to live independently, he said.

"If you look at the demographics over the past 10 to 15 years, it's going to be staggering what the numbers are going to look like."

Synergy HomeCare

Founder and CEO: Peter Tourian

Headquarters: Gilbert, Ariz.

Description: Home care services

Revenue: Not disclosed

Franchises: About 70

Founded: 2002

Web: synergyhomecare.com


cnewmarker@bizjournals.com | (612) 288-2107

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Eat More Chocolate

It's true! Dark chocolate is the new health food. Recent studies have shown that a daily serving of dark chocolate may:


1. Lower blood pressure
2. Reduce the risk of diabetes
3. Keep cholesterol levels stable or even improve them
4. Enhance cognitive function by increasing blood flow to the brain
5. Boosts mood
6. Prevents cell damage
7. Improves blood sugar levels
8. Eases a persistant cough
9. Helps ease chronic fatigue syndrome
10. Raises HDL cholesterol and lowers LDL cholesterol

Dark chocolate is full of antioxidants that help fight off cell damaging molecules in the body that accelerate aging and disease. The higher the percentage of cocoa in the chocolate, the more antioxidants it has and the better for you it is.

Health benefits are only with dark chocolate. White chocolate doesn't contain any antioxidants and milk chocolate contains extra ingredients that won't let the body absorb the antioxidants

Little Known Veteran Benefit

By Amanda Laumeyer, B.S., Gerontology
American Veterans Care Coordination
Jeanne Mers and Dad
Pictured above is Jeanne Mers, R.N., B.S.N. pictured with her father Eugene Preiss, holding AVCC brochure that

There are an estimated 17 million veterans living today who served our country in a war time. These veterans have honored their families, our country and themselves by serving their country during a war period. As these veterans age they deal with many issues that affect older adults. This includes dealing with illness and long term care expenses.

For many of these veterans they are unaware of a program available to assist them with these issues. The Veterans Administration offers Aid & Attendance to veterans and their surviving spouses who are eligible, for assistance towards home care, nursing home or assisted living costs. There are over 1 million veterans who are eligible for this benefit and only 26% of the benefit is being used, leaving almost 800,000 veterans and even more surviving spouses eligible who are not receiving it.

Eugene Preiss, 79 of St. Louis was one of those veterans until a few years ago. In 1951 Mr. Preiss was drafted into the United States Army and served during the Korean Conflict. After serving in the military he went on to become a carpenter in the St. Louis area and is a retired member of the St. Louis Carpenters Union. He and his wife Darlene have lived in the St. Louis area most of their life and raised 3 daughters together. After retiring as a carpenter Mr. Preiss struggled with some health issues including congestive heart failure and aortic aneurysms. Like many older adults he turned to the support of his children for assistance. His youngest daughter Jeanne Mers, R.N., B.S.N. had been working as a Nurse Manager for a large home care provider.
"I found myself in a role worrying about my parents and having the difficulties of trying to meet their needs, my family's needs and manage a full time job," said Jeanne.

Jeanne had dealt with families and clients in similar situations and was frustrated with the lack of funding sources for non-medical care services. Most families that Jeanne had helped were in a crisis situation and need hourly care right away. Non-medical care services are usually paid for by clients out of pocket and can cost anywhere from $20 to $25 per hour. This includes assistance by a home care aid with dressing, bathing, meal preparation, medication reminders, light housekeeping and transportation. Medical insurance and Medicare do not cover hourly non-medical care and many families are not aware of this. Medicaid is available for those who qualify but is often limited in the amount of hourly care provided. "I found out about the Aid and Attendance program through the VA and discovered it was very confusing to navigate the system," said Jeanne about the beginning stages of applying her father.
After much research with the VA, Jeanne assisted her father with gathering information and the required documents for the application. Mr. Preiss was approved for benefits and could now use that monthly benefit to pay for home care services.
"I realized that if this funding is available for veterans and spouses to help pay for home care services, assisted living or nursing home costs then I want to educate more veterans and surviving spouses and home care companies about using the VA benefit as a funding source," said Jeanne.

Jeanne and her business partner Kyle Laramie decided to start American Veterans Care Coordination to help those who served and are in need of this assistance. With Kyle's long term care experience and Jeanne's nursing background they together bring over 35 years of healthcare experience to their company. They even included her father on the cover of their brochures which shows him and two of his fellow soldiers in Korea.
"I'm proud of Jeanne and that she is helping more vets like me," said Eugene. AVCC began helping families in Missouri and soon started helping veterans and surviving spouses across the United States. American Veterans Care Coordination provides home care services and assists in obtaining the VA benefit free of charge. Everyday Jeanne helps veterans like her dad get assistance, "My goal as a nurse is to create awareness and educate veterans and surviving spouses about this little known benefit."


About the author Amanda Laumeyer is the National Sales Director for American Veterans Care Coordination. AVCC provides assistance to veterans and surviving spouses in obtaining the Aid&Attendance benefit and providing them with home care services through a professional home care provider. If you are a veteran or surviving spouse in need of healthcare services please contact us.

50 Ways to keep your brain in shape

By: Heather Boerner | Source: AARP.org
One of the best ways to stay sharp is to exercise that muscle between your ears, research indicates. And discussions with some of the top scientists studying the brain reveal that you can work your noggin in many different ways, every day.

Here are 50 of them:

1. Snack on almonds and blueberries instead of a candy bar. As they lower blood sugar, healthy snacks can improve cognition. In this case, the omega-3s in the almonds and the antioxidants in the blueberries can keep your brain functioning correctly.

2. Ballroom dance like the stars. Dancing is a brain-power activity. How so? Learning new moves activates brain motor centers that form new neural connections. Dancing also calms the brain's stress response.

3. Love the crunch of croutons on your salad? Try walnuts instead. Omega-3s in walnuts have been found to improve mood and calm inflammation that may lead to brain-cell death. They also replace lost melatonin, which is necessary for healthy brain functioning.

4. Take your dog—or yourself—for a walk. Walking for just 20 minutes a day can lower blood sugar. That helps stoke blood flow to the brain, so you think more clearly.

5. Add Chinese club moss to your daily vitamin regimen. Taking less than 100 micrograms of the herb daily may protect your brain's neurotransmitters and keep synapses firing correctly, tests suggest. But this herb is powerful, so check with your doctor for drug interactions.

6. Volunteer to answer questions at the library, arboretum, museum, or hospital. Playing tour guide forces you to learn new facts and think on your feet, helping to form new neural pathways in your brain. What's more, interacting with others can ease stress that depletes memory.

7. Grab a video-game joystick. New video games, such as the Wii and Ninetendo DS, offer brain teasers that make you learn the computer's interface as you master the brain games. That's a double boost to the formation of new neural connections and to response time and memory.

8. Leave your comfort zone. Getting good at sudoku? Time to move on. Brain teasers don't form new neural connections once you've mastered them. So try something that's opposite your natural skills: If you like numbers, learn to draw. If you love language, try logic puzzles.

9. Get support for stressors. You may love your ailing family member, but the chronic stress of facing the situation alone can shrink your brain's memory center. Interacting with others activates many parts of the brain—and learning new ways of coping forms new neural connections.

10. When you look around, really look. Stare straight ahead, and now—without moving your eyes—see if you can make out what's at the periphery. Do this regularly and you'll stimulate the neural and spatial centers of the brain, which can atrophy as you age.

11. When you look forward, also look around. Walking down the street, don't just keep your eyes forward. Scan to the left and to the right. These actions can activate rarely used parts of the brain. That in turn can spur brain cell growth and new neural connections.

12. Show, don't tell. When you woke up this morning, how bright was the light in your room? What did the air smell like when you opened the window? How many colors could you discern in your garden? Notice and report these details to others to prompt cell growth in the visual, verbal, and memory parts of the brain.

13. Listen for details when a friend tells a story. Heed changes in the person's tone and register small facts you might otherwise gloss over. Conjure a mental image of the story. By doing this, you activate multiple areas in the brain and encourage memory formation.

14. Drink two cups of gotu kola tea daily. This ayurvedic herb, used for centuries in India, regulates dopamine. That's the brain chemical that helps protect brain cells from harmful free radicals, boosts pleasurable feelings, and improves focus and memory.

15. Try some new tea. Tulsi tea, made of an Indian herb called holy basil, and ginseng tea both contain herbs that can help reduce overproduction of the stress hormone cortisol, which can hamper memory. The herbs also help keep you alert.

16. Sit quietly, choose a word that calms you, and when your mind starts to wander, say the word silently. A form of meditation, this type of activity can reduce the stress hormone cortisol, which zaps memory. Meditation also helps mitigate focus-stealing feelings like depression and anxiety.

17. Get with the times—keep calendars in every room. Checking calendars keeps you focused and oriented, while creating a mental picture of the day in your head.

18. Get some class. Live near a college? Research shows that taking courses—even just auditing them—can stave off dementia at an early age. Don't go in for formal learning? Check out book readings, seminars, and other educational events.

19. Wear a helmet. Riding your bike is great for your health—until you fall and get a concussion. Even one serious concussion could increase your risk of developing dementia. So protect your physical brain as meticulously as you would protect its functioning by doing brain teasers.

20. Sip red wine, judiciously. Up to two glasses for women and up to three for men weekly delivers the powerful antioxidant resveratrol, which may prevent free radicals from damaging brain cells. But beware: Drinking more than that could leach thiamine, a brain-boosting nutrient.

21. Check your thyroid. It's a tiny little gland in your neck, but it could have a big effect on brain health: Thyroid hormones (T4 and T3) help nerve cells make connections. If you don't have enough of them you may be depressed, tired, and foggy-headed.

22. Choose lean pork loin crusted in peanuts and broccoli over fries and a burger. The pork and peanuts are high in thiamin, a nutrient that reduces inflammation that damages brain cells. The folate in broccoli is good for keeping synapses firing correctly.

23. Replace candy with a sweet pick-me-up of pears, apples, oranges, and cantaloupe. The combination prevents elevated blood sugar that could impede brain cells from firing correctly. It also provides fiber and antioxidants that help scrub plaque from brain arteries and mop up free radicals that inhibit clear thinking.

24. Top rolled oats with cinnamon for a brainy breakfast. The oats scrub plaques from your brain arteries, while a chemical in cinnamon is good for keeping your blood sugar in check—which can improve neurotransmission.

25. Turn up the tunes. TV may provide a lot of stimuli, but watching too much can dull brain transmission. Instead, spend an afternoon listening to your favorite music. Music can lower stress hormones that inhibit memory and increase feelings of well-being that improve focus.

26. Curry up. The active ingredient in Indian curry, turmeric, contains resveratrol, the same powerful antioxidant that makes red wine good for brain health. Eat curry once a week, or sprinkle it on salads, to protect brain cells from harmful free radicals.

27. Take a food break. Research shows that people who fast one day a week or month unlock a unique form of blood glucose that helps the brain more efficiently transmit information. Then break your fast with brain-healthy blueberries, walnuts, and maybe a glass of red wine.

28. Replace the olive oil in your favorite vinaigrette with walnut oil. Walnut oil, which is chock-full of brain-healthy omega-3s, cuts brain inflammation, a precursor to many cognitive problems. It also keeps oxygen-rich blood flowing to your brain by thinning the blood slightly.

29. Go wild with fish. While fish is generally good for you, the metals that accumulate in farmed fish like tilapia may contribute to cognitive impairments. So when you're shopping, check that the fish is from the wild, not domestically raised, and stick with heart- and brain-healthy fish like salmon and sardines.

30. Redecorate and redesign your environment. Plant new flowers in front of your house. Redecorate the kitchen. Rearrange your closets and drawers. Replace the candles in your living room with some that have a different scent. Making such changes can alter motor pathways in the brain and encourage new cell growth.

31. Choose a side. Talk sports, business, or politics. If you can do it without getting angry, which raises the memory-hindering hormone cortisol, engaging in a good debate can form new neural pathways and force you to think quickly and formulate your thoughts clearly.

32. Sleep. Shut-eye isn't a luxury. It's when your brain consolidates memories. Poor sleep, caused by medical conditions, worry, depression, or insomnia, can interfere with your rest. So treat yourself to relaxing scents like vanilla before bed. They raise the chemical dopamine and reduce cortisol, a stress hormone.

33. Check your neck. It may sound crazy, but a clot in your neck can stunt your memory by preventing enough blood and oxygen from getting to your brain. At your next checkup, ask your doctor to use the other side of his stethoscope to ensure that all's clear in your carotid artery—the main one in your neck.

34. Take a mental picture. Connect names with faces by creating mental images that trick your mind into remembering. For instance, remember Mr. Bender with the curly hair by imagining him bent over, with his curly hair facing you.

35. Read the news. Keeping up with the latest not only activates the memory part of the brain but also gives you something to talk about with friends and family. That kind of socializing can activate multiple parts of your brain and encourage cell growth.

36. Turn off the TV and pick up an instrument. Frequently tickling the ivories or blowing a horn—especially if you're trying to master it—is associated with lower dementia risks. What's more, it eliminates boredom, a brain state that can cause some thinking skills to atrophy.

37. Join a book club. Pick up a good book to cut down on brain-withering boredom. Frequent reading is associated with reduced risk of dementia. And meeting new people forces new neural connections. Besides, you might enjoy the book.

38. Play Yahtzee! Whether you choose Risk, Pictionary, Scrabble, or Boggle, board games are associated with a lower risk of developing dementia. They activate strategic, spatial, and memory parts of the brain, and require you to socialize, which can help form new neural pathways.

39. Parlez-vous brain health? You don't have to be a linguist to benefit from learning a new language. Adopting a foreign tongue boosts the verbal, language, and memory parts of the brain.

40. Savor a sensory experience. Those with the best memories take advantage of all their senses. That's because memorization is a cohesive brain effort. So head to the garden or the kitchen and take in the sights, smells, sounds, tastes, and sensations.

41. Quick temper? Instead of yelling, take a few minutes to cool down. The stress of chronic anger can actually shrink the memory centers in the brain. Get to know the signs that you're seething and address the problem before it erupts.

42. Replace your salt shaker with a sodium-free alternative. We all know that hypertension can lead to heart problems, but new evidence suggests that decreasing the salt in your diet can also improve blood flow to the brain and decrease dementia.

43. Have a chat. Instead of popping in another movie rental, pick up the phone. Talking with someone else not only gets you out of your rut—lack of activity can decrease brain-cell formation—but the socializing can also reduce potentially memory-sapping depression.

44. Check your meds. It may not be you having the memory problems; instead, it could be your medications impeding your memory. Older antidepressants, anti-diuretics and antihistamines—all block a critical brain chemical from doing its job. Ask your doctor for an alternative.

45. Bear some weight. Adding a little strength training to your daily walks can help protect brain cells from damage done by free radicals—and encourage new brain-cell growth. So strap some weights on your ankles or wrists as you walk, or practice gentle yoga.

46. Let yourself sleep in. Research shows that when you're chronically sleep-deprived, your body doesn't have the time to build proteins and other brain- boosting components. So instead of waking yourself early, sleep until you wake naturally.

47. Take an afternoon catnap. Most of sleep's boost to concentration and memory happens in the first stage, so even a snooze as short at 30 minutes can benefit your brain.

48. Switch hands. It may be uncomfortable, but writing with your nondominant hand or operating a computer mouse with that hand can activate parts of the brain that aren't easily triggered otherwise. Anything that requires the brain to pay close attention to a formerly automatic behavior will stimulate brain-cell growth.

49. Shake your body. Gentle bouncing of your knees and shaking out of your limbs reduces the brain-sapping stress hormone cortisol, research shows. It also triggers relaxation and alertness that keeps your brain sharp. Do it for a few minutes in the morning and at night.

50. Tour your neighborhood. If your neighborhood is growing, check it out. The exploration will change your mental map of the neighborhood. Along with learning new and better routes to your favorite stores or restaurants, you'll forge new neural pathways in your brain.

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Fun Events for Seniors

Manitou Days in White Bear Lake, MN has a great event for seniors. They are having pontoon rides for seniors this Wednesday June 24th from 1pm - 3pm. The boats will be departing from Tally's promptly at 1 p.m. Limited Space. For reservations call the senior center at 651-653-3121

Monday, June 1, 2009

Tips for Caregivers working with Vision and Hearing Loss Clients

We here at Synergy have learned some great tips for any caregiver that is dealing with someone who is losing both their sight and hearing.We here at Synergy have learned some great tips for any caregiver that is dealing with someone who is losing both their sight and hearing.

1. When a person first arrives, orient them to their bed, bathroom, closet, dresser, etc.

2. Notate up front in person's chart their vision and/or hearing loss.

3. To get the person's attention, gently touch their shoulder, arm or hand. State your name and reason for visit. Determine if person is visually and/or hearing impaired and adjust voice as needed.

4. Identify.....Yourself every time. If difficult for person to hear, and they have some remaining vision, write name and role (i.e. Judy — nurse) in large print with felt tip marker to show them.

5. Inform person before you begin to do anything with or to them! For example, do not move them or grab their arm without first explaining what you are doing and why. Use "sighted guide" technique if assistance is requested.

6. Speak clearly, at a slow-to-normal rate and pause between sentences. Do not shout. Shouting can distort the sound signal and make you seem angry. Stand within 3 to 6 feet of individual and keep movement to minimum while speaking.

7. Rephrase rather than repeat when you are not understood. For example, rephrase `Do you want a drink?' to `Would you like some water?'

8. Ask person if they can understand you, not just hear you. Understanding and hearing are two different things. Ask WH questions (what where, and why) rather than yes/no questions.

9. Do not move things in the room or on the bedside table unless necessary. If you do move something, let the person know and be specific about new location.

10. Do not stand in front of a light source or window as the glare may be difficult for the person facing you. Rather, position yourself where light falls on you and sit or stand at their level.

11. Ask person if they need help reading the menu and selecting meal choices.

12. When serving a meal, describe the position of food on the plate by relating them to the numbers on the face of a clock. For example, `Meat is at 6:00 and potatoes are at 10:00'. Explain where other items are such as beverages and salads.

13. Give explicit directions and verbal responses. Be careful not to only use hand signals, nod, or say things such as `over there'. Be specific: `The chair is 4 feet to your right'.

14. Read ALL materials clearly as they appear on the page; do not read excerpts or summarize unless the visually impaired person requests you to do so.

15. Be patient, positive, and relaxed. It may take time to learn how to best talk with someone. Experiment and ask how you can help!