Checklist for choosing an aged care facility December 3, 2009
Posted by columbiaagedcare in Uncategorized.Tags: aged care, Aged Care Australia, aged care services, Columbia Aged Care Acacia Centre, Columbia Aged Care Services, elderly, Residential Aged Care, Residential Care
add a comment
- Does the overall atmosphere appear friendly, safe and comfortable?
- Does it seem to be a comfortable temperature for all residents?
- Are residents treated with respect as well as in a friendly manner?
- Do the staff seem caring and attentive towards residents?
- Are there other people with similar care needs to yours?
- Will it be easy to see your family and friends?
- Is it easy to get to local shops, club, church or other places and events?
- Is there adequate transport to help you get where you want to go?
- Are there call-bells in the bedrooms, bathrooms and communal areas?
- Are rooms, stairs and corridors suitably lit?
- Is there a safe garden that residents can use?
- Are there smoke detectors and fire extinguishers?
- Are there security arrangements?
- If you have to share a room can you meet the other person beforehand to see that you get on?
- Are there screens in shared rooms to give privacy?
- Can you bring some of your own furniture and belongings?
- Can you lock your cupboard?
- Can you have your own TV in your room?
- Can you have a telephone installed in your room?
- Can you have air-conditioning installed?
- Are toilets, baths and showers easy and private for residents to use?
- Is there a toilet within easy reach of your bedroom?
- Are there toilets within easy reach of all the communal rooms?
- Is there a choice of lounges?
- Is there more than one TV room?
- Is there a quiet room with no TV?
- Are there non-smoking rooms?
- Are you comfortable with the “house rules” (eg. About smoking or pets)?
- Is there an independent Residents and Relatives group?
- Can you get up and go to bed when you want to?
- Will your room be cleaned at least once a week?
- Can you help arround the nursing home or hostel if you want to?
- Are daily papers and mail delivered?
- Is there a staff member who can speak your language?
- Is there a policy of culturally appropriate care?
- Is there a secure place where personal items and valuables can be kept?
- Does the nursing home or hostel take responsibility for insuring your possessions?
- Do the menus include foods which you like?
- Do the menus give you a choice of dishes?
- Is it possible to have meals other than at set times?
- Can you have meals in your rooms?
- Are social events and outings organised frequently?
- Will you be able to practice your own religion?
- Are there regular visits by a practitioner from your religion?
- Can you have a telephone in your room?
- Is there a telephone you can use without people overhearing what you are saying?
- Can family and friends visit you without restriction?
- Are there places where you can spend time in private with your guests?
- Can visitors stay for a meal or even overnight?
- Can you have a say in the way you are looked after/helped?
- Is the personal care you need available?(eg. Help with washing, bathing or going to the toilet)?
- Will your health care needs be met?
- Will you have access to a doctor at all times if required?
- Is there a local doctor who accepts patients from the nursing home or hostel?
- Does a doctor visit the nursing home or hostel regularly?
- Do other other health professionals visit the nursing home/hostel regularly(eg. Physiotherapist, podiatrist, dentist)?
Gardens Brighten Seniors’ Lives November 4, 2009
Posted by columbiaagedcare in articles.Tags: aged care, Aged Care Australia, Columbia Aged Care Services, Gardening, Gardening for the elderly, Senior Gardening, Seniors Activities
add a comment
Home Instead Senior Care and Rebecca Kolls, star of television show Rebecca’s Garden have provided some helpful hints to help seniors continue to enjoy gardening.
This dual-effort public-education campaign has sought to bring back gardening joys to seniors who have difficulty maintaining gardens, or who have given up gardening altogether due to health or age concerns. The initiative’s primary feature, a four-color gardening guide, includes lots of helpful tips and several fun, simple projects seniors can easily complete – either independently or with their families or caregivers.
Kolls, whose grandparents originally inspired her interest in gardening, credits gardens with supplying not only food and beauty, but also improved mental and physical well-being.
“There’s a nurturing aspect in gardening where you take a seed and coddle it,” Kolls said. “Seniors have given up child rearing, so gardening gives them baby plants and seedlings again. It’s a new way of caring for something.”
“We often hear our CAREGivers speak of their clients who love to care for plants and flowers, and how they see it enriching those clients’ lives,” said Home Instead Senior Care CEO Paul Hogan. “Many of our CAREGivers enjoy gardening as well, and are thrilled to help seniors enjoy gardening and plant projects.”
Another great thing about gardening as a senior activity is that it is timeless. “The beauty of the garden, if done well, will provide four seasons of color. While seniors in warmer climates can garden year-round, those in cold-weather climates should not despair,” Kolls said. “In the winter, snow catches in seed heads, and birds find refuge in shrubbery and feed off seeds from the cone flowers. So no matter where you live, there’s alwayssomething growing in the garden.”
One Container; Many Opportunities
A little creative thinking and some assistance from families or caregivers helps ensure that seniors can continue to enjoy the types of gardening they love. “Imagine growing almost everything for a recipe in one container,” Kolls said. “What a great gift idea!”
She suggests the following projects to get you started:
- Try a pizza garden! (If your senior isn’t a pizza fan, he or she might enjoy growing one for grandchildren.) Whiskey barrels work well for growing tomatoes, but can be expensive. A plastic laundry basket with holes cut in the bottom for drainage will work just as well. Plant a Roma tomato in the center, onions along the sides of the tomato and basil around the edge of the container.
- A twist on the pizza garden concept: a fresh salsa garden! It’s similar to a pizza garden, only with tomatoes, onions, hot peppers and cilantro.
- A one-pot vegetable garden is always a hit! Take three bamboo poles and make a teepee in the center of the pot. Plant beans at the base of each bamboo pole, and fill the horizontal space around the pot with carrots, beets or other favorite root vegetables (make sure your pot is at least 10 to 12 inches deep.)
Rebecca’s Senior Gardening Tips
Check out these handy tidbits on how to help the seniors achieve gardening success:
- Herbs grow anywhere and are great for seasoning. Kitchen herb gardens are wonderful for seniors. The more you pinch and pick the herbs, such as basil, parsley and chives, the more vigorous they grow.
- Think height, filler and spiller. When you’re creating flowerpots, consider height, filler and spiller. Plant a variety that will grow at least twice as tall as the container; fill in with plants that will grow to no more than half of the height of the taller plants, and then plant a variety that will cascade over the pot.
- When it comes to annuals, pack them in. When you create flowerpots, pack your annuals in because they will become root-bound and grow up and over the pots. You’ll get drama and a beautiful arrangement, according to Kolls.
- Look for equipment that can make the job easier. There are many wonderful tools available that can make gardening easier for anyone including seniors. According to Kolls, Bud-Eze tools, which can be found on the Internet, are a good option, as are bionic gloves. In addition, the Arthritis Foundation has a product and services directory for senior gardeners and others with mobility problems.
- Garden right outside your front door or back door. Container gardening allows seniors access to flowers or vegetables in one pot and also gives them the height that helps make gardening easier for them.
- Team with others to garden. If a senior can’t garden anymore, enlist the help of others who might enjoy sharing the work and the produce or flowers from the garden.
Establish an Exercise Regime – Take a Daily Walk July 29, 2009
Posted by columbiaagedcare in articles.Tags: aged care, Aged Care Australia, aged health, Columbia Aged Care Services, elderly fitness, Exercise, Seniors Activities
add a comment
Aged Care Matters discusses the importance of finding the time for a daily walk.
As in any other stage of life exercise is paramount to remaining fit and healthy. However depending on your level of fitness it is always wise to check with your doctor before embarking on any new exercise program. It maybe that what you are considering may not be suitable or recommended by your doctor.
If there is no medical reason to prevent you from exercising, why not take a daily brisk walk. This will certainly go a long way to helping you achieve your fitness goals. Try and find somewhere interesting to walk so your enthusiasm for this activity does not wane over time. See if you can find a companion to go with you on these walks. Not only will your fitness be improved but also your personal relationships will be enhanced. Someone who perhaps you barely know as a neighbour in time may turn out to be a very close and trusted friend.
Why not join a walking group if there is one in your community. This too will provide opportunities to meet new people and may also prove a means to broadening your friendship base. Not only will it get you out of the house but as a bonus you will get to see more of your surrounding district whilst you work on maintaining a fit and healthy lifestyle.
Senior Safety Checklist July 8, 2009
Posted by columbiaagedcare in Uncategorized.Tags: aged care, Aged Care Australia, Columbia Aged Care Services, safety in the home, senior safety
add a comment
Care Giver Stress have provided ten tips to ensure a senior’s home is hazard free.
Each year, many older Australians are injured in and around their homes – often from hazards that are easily overlooked, but easy to prevent. By spotting these dangers and taking simple steps to correct them, many senior injuries can be prevented, and family caregivers can have extra peace of mind.
Below is a list of the top 10 safety issues commonly witnessed by Home Instead Senior Care professional caregivers in thousands of senior homes:
Top 10 safety issues
1. Loose area rugs/tripping hazards
2. No “life alert” or other pendant emergency-alert system
3. Spoiled food in the refrigerator
4. Lack of safety bar in bathtub/shower
5. Shower within tub/ No walk-in shower
6. Lots of clutter/furniture make mobility difficult
7. Steep steps
8. Low supply of food
9. Poor lighting
10. No telephone near the bed
Family caregivers should walk through their relative’s home to make sure none of these hazards are present, and work with the senior to make he or she feels safe, depending depend on the type of physical limitations this person has and how severe they are. Acquiring the necessary assistance, such as non-medical home care and safety-proofing your loved one’s home, will put all family members at ease.
Spice it Up! July 2, 2009
Posted by columbiaagedcare in Uncategorized.Tags: aged care, Aged Care Australia, columbia aged care, Columbia Aged Care Services, cooking, cooking for seniors, Seniors
add a comment
Home Instead Senior Care say that cooking for seniors shouldn’t be boring. They have provided some tips to help seniors spice up their cooking, as well three easy recipe ideas.
According to Rachael Ray, host of the hit cooking show 30-Minute Meals, toning down the flavour in seniors’ food is not only unnecessary, but undesirable.
“There’s no excuse for making food dull, lifeless and boring,” Ray said. “Seniors want good flavor. Cook to impress; cook to be excited, or, at the very least, cook to share.”
Ray says that while adult children often assume their senior loved ones need bland food for their digestive health, foods from these older adults’ earlier years actually can offer many important benefits.
“Food helps seniors reconnect with the past,” Ray said. “As its nostalgia factor ties all of us to where we’re from, it can be a wonderful tool for seniors who have trouble with short-term memory loss, dementia and other illnesses that remove them from the world.”
Food also allows seniors to “travel” via no more than a trip to the grocery store. Whether your senior is from Russia, Germany, France, Ireland – wherever – serving food native to those places can take them back to things that help make them feel good, whole, happy and excited about living.
Ray, who was raised in a multi-generational Sicilian restaurant family, said she was lucky to share food with many generations. “There’s something really intimate about many generations sharing delicious food together,” she said.
According to a group of family caregivers surveyed in a Harris Interactive poll conducted for Home Instead Senior Care, nearly 44 percent help their loved ones cook, while 59 percent assist with grocery shopping. Home Instead Senior Care often steps in to assist with meal preparation when family caregivers can’t.
“We know from experience that seniors like their mealtimes to be interesting – and not just for the food, but also for the setting, companionship and conversation,” said Paul Hogan, CEO of Home Instead Senior Care.
Ray and Hogan agree on the importance of involving seniors in meal preparations as much as possible.
“Our CAREGivers really get to know their clients’ preferences, and often help them prepare their favorite recipes,” Hogan said.
While having help in the kitchen can definitely influence whether or not a senior eats well, Ray advises caregivers to make meal planning and preparation a shared activity whenever possible.
“Even if they can’t help you with any of the preparations, try to have them in the room with you when you’re cooking,” she said. “Talk to them let them smell and feel the food as it happens. It’s a visceral experience that involves all the senses and makes seniors feel whole. Really good food doesn’t just fill you up – it makes you feel alive.”
Four Quick and Easy Ways to Achieve Senior Meal Success
“A little creativity goes a long way toward improving on the flavor of seniors’ food while staying within their dietary guidelines,” said Ray, who advocates moderation rather than denial. She recommends the following ways to enhance your seniors’ diets without compromising their health:
Add low-sodium, no-salt stock to a sauce to make it taste like it has been simmering all day. Likewise, cook rice in chicken or vegetable stock rather than water, and replace cream with stock when making mashed potatoes for a flavorful, low-fat alternative.
Fresh herbs are a no-fat addition, and readily available in grocery stores to brighten the flavor of salads, dressing and sauces.
Purchase better cuts of meat for better flavor and less fat. “Seniors shouldn’t sacrifice quality, even if they’re on a budget,” Ray said. She also warns against buying fatty instead of lean, healthy meats to save pennies, because in the end you won’t – you’ll have to trim. And the amount of waste, balanced against lean, clean meat evens out the expense. In the long run, a small amount of lean protein is better than a larger amount of fatty protein.
Stock up on fresh meats and vegetables when they are on sale, then divide and freeze them. “Prepared foods aren’t good for seniors because they can’t control the amount of salts, fats and additives in them,” Ray said. “Seniors should instead invest in raw foods they can fully cook – which will taste better to them, as well.”
Three 30-Minute Meals Recipes for Seniors!
To spice up a senior’s culinary life, Ray recommends the following:
Double-Dipped Spicy Chicken
Vegetable oil, for frying
1 1/2 cups flour
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon poultry seasoning
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon allspice
1 cup buttermilk
1 pound boneless, skinless chicken thighs
1 pound chicken breast tenderloins
Salt and pepper
Heat 1 1/2 inches vegetable oil in a deep skillet over medium high heat. A cube of bread should brown in a 40 count when oil is ready. Set out three disposable pie tins. Mix flour with paprika, poultry seasoning, cayenne and allspice. Divide seasoned flour between two tins. Pour buttermilk into a tin. Line up tins as such: flour, buttermilk and then flour. Season chicken with salt and pepper Coat chicken in flour, then buttermilk, then a second coating of flour. Cook chicken 6 minutes on each side, until deep golden brown and firm. Drain chicken on paper bags and cool before packing up for picnic basket.
Yield: 4 servings
Blue Cheese and Walnut Salad with Maple Dressing
1 (10-ounce) bag baby spinach
1/3 pound blue cheese, crumbled
1 (6-ounce) can walnut halves, toasted
1/4 cup maple syrup, warmed
1 1/2 tablespoons cider vinegar
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
Salt and pepper
Place spinach on a large platter. Top with blue cheese and walnuts. Warm maple syrup in a small saucepan. Pour vinegar into a small bowl. Whisk oil into vinegar in a slow stream. Whisk maple syrup into dressing in a slow stream. Pour dressing down over the salad platter and serve. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Yield: 4 servings
Chocolate-Dipped Bananas
4 bananas
8 Popsicle sticks
3 cups good-quality chocolate bar
3 tablespoons butter, cut up
Toppings:
Chopped nuts
Toasted coconut
Cookie crumbles
Colored sprinkles or chocolate jimmies
Mini chocolate candies or mini semi sweet chips
Granola
Peel and cut the bananas in half crosswise, so that you have 8 pieces. Place peeled bananas on sticks. Line a cookie sheet with waxed paper. Place bananas on cookie sheet in the freezer, keeping them there as long as possible – at least 10 minutes. Heat chocolate bits with butter in a double boiler over low heat until the melted chocolate and the butter are incorporated. Dip the chilled bananas in chocolate and roll with your favorite topping. Chill or freeze until ready to serve. If frozen, allow time to thaw so that bananas soften before serving.
Yield: 8 chocolate-dipped bananas
Stress and your health February 10, 2009
Posted by columbiaagedcare in Uncategorized.add a comment
The first step in dealing with caregiver stress is to recognize the signs. Then, you can find ways to deal with it and enlist support or medical help when needed.
Emotional Signs of Caregiver Stress include:
Anxiety
Depression
Moodiness/mood swings
Butterflies
Irritability, easily frustrated, road rage
Memory problems and lack of concentration
Feeling out of control
Increased substance abuse
Phobias
Argumentative
Feeling of isolation
Job dissatisfaction
If you are experiencing some of the signs listed above, consider talking with a healthcare professional who can help you to evaluate your situation. It is important that a family caregiver realize that she or he is not alone. Getting support will help reduce caregiver stress, as well as reduce the associated physical and emotional risks of ongoing stress.
Remember, it is not selfish to focus on your own needs and desires when you are a family caregiver. In fact, it is a necessity to take initiative with your own physical and emotional care, or else it could make you less useful to the person for whom you are caring.
Cooking for the elderly February 4, 2009
Posted by columbiaagedcare in Uncategorized.Tags: aged care services, care, columbia, cooking, elderly, Health
add a comment
It’s really nice to show you care by cooking special favourite meals for the resident of an aged care facility — perhaps culturally specific food or a family favourite which is not normally available in that facility.
But if you do, you really wouldn’t want to make them sick, so there are some things you need to know.
Immune systems of the elderly get weaker as they get older. Their stomachs produce less acid which makes it easier for harmful germs to get through the digestive system and invade their bodies.
If elderly people do get food poisoning, they are also likely to suffer more severe consequences. These can range from mild dehydration to neuromuscular dysfunction or even death. Older people also take longer than most of us to recover from food poisoning.
There are some foods that pose a higher risk than others, particularly of passing on a Listeria infection which is dangerous for the elderly.
Higher risk foods include but are not limited to:
• Cold meats – cooked or uncooked, packaged or unpackaged.
• Cold cooked chicken Purchased whole, portions, sliced or diced
• Pate Refrigerated pate, liverwurst or meat spreads
• Salads Pre-prepared or pre-packaged fruit, vegetables or
• Chilled seafood Raw or smoked ready-to-eat eg oysters, sashimi or
• Sushi, smoked salmon or trout, sandwich fillings, precooked
This fact sheet has been kindly sponsored by Compass Group (Australia).
Care January 28, 2009
Posted by columbiaagedcare in Uncategorized.add a comment
Often in our community today, stories of care go unnoticed. The nightly news is filled with stories of horror and sadness. This infiltrates our communities to such an extent that we often forget, or do not see, the interactions of humans that are based deeply and primarily in care, concern and compassion for others.
People often talk of footballers and pop stars as being heroes but aren’t the true heroes in life those that sacrifice something of their own for the sake of another? Visiting a relative in need, forgoing something of material value for another or even allowing someone in the queue ahead of us at the supermarket when we sense they are struggling are ways of offering a sense of care in the world.
In our busy lives the opportunities to care for another are presented to us every day, however, we may often miss the moment in the rush to our next meeting or other priorities.
Older people have lived rich and complex lives and many have had their lives devoted to the caring of others. Now is their time for them to rightly receive the highest quality of care. Take the time to care for the elderly in your life and show them an act of kindness to let them know you care.
By David Goldman, Clinical Psychologist
Finding a holiday to suit you January 21, 2009
Posted by columbiaagedcare in Uncategorized.Tags: aged, care, columbia, elderly, holiday, services, vacation
add a comment
There are a wide range of holidays available now, from beach to city break, cruise, activity holiday, or visiting friends and relatives. What is important is that the destination and type of holiday you buy suits your needs. If you’re considering going on a long stay holiday and you are in receipt of any benefits, check with the office that pays you whether these benefits will be affected.
Read up about the destinations you’re interested in:
• Are there cultural, language or other considerations to bear in mind? You may find it useful to know about local laws, for example about alcohol or drugs, and dress codes. Also the cost of living may be higher or lower than Australia, so you may need to allow for this in spending money.
• Find out whether the destination matches your needs, for example a hilly location may not suit someone with mobility problems.
• If the holiday involves a different type of activity, prepare ahead. For example you may need to build up your physical fitness for a sporting holiday.
• Think about whether you want to arrange it all yourself or visit a travel agent – an independent holiday may be time consuming to plan so that travel fits in with accommodation, or it may be a way of providing exactly what you want.
Source: http://www.ageconcern.org.uk/AgeConcern/how_we_help.asp