Are You an Unconscious Caregiver?

If you’re providing care on a regular basis for elderly loved ones, are you doing it on autopilot?

Many of us are.

Chances are good that you have an unconscious program running in the deepest recesses of your brain that’s telling you what to think, feel, and do as a caregiver.

What a Caregiver Needs Most

It’s not easy being a caregiver. I know this from personal experience.

Caregivers need support. They need someone to turn to. Most don’t have anyone.

As an elder care coordinator in a Life Care Planning Law Firm, I specialize in supporting family caregivers. It’s one of the most important parts of my job.

Getting to Yes: Creative Ways to Handle Stubbornness

If you’re caring for an older relative, you’ve probably experienced it. You ask your loved one to do something. It could be anything: get dressed, take medicine on time, anything. Your loved one refuses.

Why does this happen? There are as many reasons as there are people. Fear of death, worries about being forced into a nursing home (if they’re not already there), dementia, frustration at the losses that come with advanced age, and depression over those losses are a few examples.

Why Advance Directives Matter

What is an advance directive? Why is it so important? Why do people put off creating them? We posed these questions to Jessica Greene, a Certified Elder Law Attorney at Walters & Galloway, PLLC, a Life Care Planning Law Firm in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania. Jessica has more than a decade of experience helping families address these delicate issues.

Life Care Planning Law Firms: The Best Choice for Medicaid Planning

If someone you love needs Medicaid to help pay for long-term care in a nursing home, one Google search will reveal that there’s no shortage of traditional elder law attorneys who are ready and willing to help. But is a traditional elder law attorney, one whose practice focuses solely on getting older adults qualified for public benefits, really the best choice if your loved one needs long-term care?

What is Sundowning Behavior?

When you care for a person with dementia, it doesn’t take long before you hear someone whisper the expression, “he’s sundowning.” What does this mean for a person with dementia and their caregivers?

What is Sundowning?

Sundowning is a syndrome and a label given to a group of symptoms commonly experienced by people with dementia in late afternoon or evening. The symptoms can vary but typically include worsened confusion, anxiety, and aggression as well as pacing or wandering.

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