Newsletter_Header_GB_supplied
Client_Companion_share_memories_newsletter797x190
The Care Connection                        call: 800-464-5088Issue #2

 

In this month's "Care Connection" we have a few warm- hearted people to introduce, and some great stories to share. Hopefully we're doing just a little bit to take the chill out of these long winter months.

Sandra Butler, a Gerontological Nurse and Care Manager, is this month's featured colleague and shares with us how to improve communication between client families and the agency providing caregivers.

In our "Companion Connection" section you'll hear the story of client "Auggie" told by companion Jean Bauer, one of our many trusted staff members, as she describes 'how with a bit of encouragement' helped Auggie step back out into the community with great results.

Finally, by way of our friends at "Newsday Long Island", we share a great article they published recently highlighting the latest technology in personal entertainment devices, and how it is helping seniors respond positively to customized music libraries that have been developed for them, so they can interact and react to the music and the emotions rekindled from their lives.

 

Rick_Scher

Care Connection, Inc.

Founder & Executive Director Richard Scher

Please watch and share our videos. If you have the time, please take a look at our new website, www.nycareconnection.com you'll find videos and other content to help you start the process and see that our intent is to educate caregivers and family members to be better prepared when caring for an elder or disabled loved one.

Sincerely, 

Richard Scher
Executive Director

Companion Connection
Jean_Bauer_Companion_142x117
Jean Bauer Truly Enjoys Her Companion Duties

 

"What I enjoy most is that every day I get to go to someone's home and help them out a little bit. I have two older clients who are home alone... and they, in addition to helping them around the house they just really enjoy having company and somebody else to talk to..." 

Play Jean's Video 

 

Jean Bauer,

Care Connection Companion

About Us
Care_Connection_Staff_266x178
The Care Connection Office Team
Dr. Richard W. Scher founded Care Connection, Inc. in 1998 to focus on the non-medical, safety and emotional concerns of the geriatric population. Having treated seniors for over 30 years, he realized that so many require practical assistance or just need a helping hand to feel safe and secure. 

Care Connection specializes in offering non-medical help with day to day tasks in a sensitive and concerned way. Matching and connecting the right caregiver to you or your family member is what we do best.

If you or a loved one is recovering from an illness and need assistance by a qualified companion at home, assisted living facility or hospital for the short or long term, Care Connection will provide you with someone who is loving and trustworthy.

Our Services Include:

  • Safety and Supervision
  • Companionship and Conversation
  • Mental Stimulation
  • Medication Reminders
  • Respite for Caregivers
  • Monitoring Food and Diet
  • Grocery Shopping
  • Meal Preparation
  • Transportation and Errands
  • Light Housekeeping and Laundry

   

Kathy__client_call
Kathy Guthy and Dr. Scher Discuss A Client

     Care Connection has a licensed social worker on staff with 16 years of home care experience and training to address the needs of seniors.

Our experienced care coordinators enjoy helping others. Since we go the extra mile to take care of our companions, and make sure the case works for them, clients in turn enjoy exceptional care on their end.

By conducting a lengthy interview with the client and family, we will listen and respond to your needs to make the appropriate match.


 


Call: 

800-464-5088

Ann_Scher_phone_consult­_359x201
Office Manager Ann Helping A Client
In This Issue
Companion Jean B. shares her story
Gerontologic Nurse Sandra Butler
Video Connection

 

Featured Colleague

Sandra Butler

Sandra Butler, R.N., C., MS

Gerontological Nurse

"It's very important so that there is no misunderstanding or expectations that have not been clearly defined, for the family to ask the home care agency first of all what the services are at the level of care that the agency can provide. There are different levels of care and different personnel to meet those levels of care.  For instance... Is there going to be house cleaning? That doesn't necessarily mean that there will be window washing... What are the meal requirements? Is the care provider going to drive the individual to go shopping? Lots of times a family has no idea what services a home care agency is able to provide and it is very important right from the beginning, that they are able to ask the questions and be clearly defined as to what the expectation of the service is."

Find us on Facebook

   

 

 

 

Ipods Benefit Nursing Home Residents
Resident Enjoying Her Favorite Music

 

Group: iPods help nursing home residents

 

A man who hardly ever moves begins to tap his toes. A woman who cannot speak a coherent sentence starts singing the lines of a song, word for word. A seriously ill patient on pain medication finds his dosage needs to be decreased.

 

 

These and other beneficial effects of personalized music are being documented at local nursing homes as part of a pilot program by Music & Memory, a Mineola nonprofit that aims to improve residents' quality of life through iPods.

 

The group held a Long Island launch in hopes of bringing the program to more facilities. The event at Unitarian Universalist Congregation at Shelter Rock in Manhasset focused on the iPod program's benefits for nursing home residents.

 

Instead of general music played over loudspeakers in facilities, Music & Memory Executive Director Dan Cohen wanted to see what would happen if the music was personalized. With $250,000 in funding from the Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation, he began a pilot program in four nursing homes, including at A. Holly Patterson Extended Care Facility in Uniondale.

 

Cohen found out what kind of music residents liked, then loaded it onto the iPods, which were then given to the residents or staff. Over time he would come back and adjust the selections based on what music seemed to have the most impact.

 

What staff found, Cohen said, was that the music would stimulate memories and even those who never spoke or were mostly immobile would often start to talk, sing or dance.

"With music, you're touching people on a very deep level," said Lee Grace Cannella, director of the therapeutic recreation program at Long Island State Veterans Home in Stony Brook, which has had the program for several months. "It connects you to something deep inside you that goes beyond your age or condition."

 

Connie Tomaino, Executive Director of Institute for Music and Neurologic Function, said research has shown that personalized music stimulates a certain area of the brain and taps into memories associated with that music. In those with Alzheimer's disease, this part of the brain remains active even as other functions decline, she said, and one study even showed significant cognitive improvement in such patients after listening to music.

Personalized music helps more than the residents, Cohen said. It often spurs the person to engage more with family and can ease workers' burdens. The latter is particularly true with agitated dementia patients, he said, who become calmer after listening to the music.

 

The Music & Memory program is in 11 nursing homes on Long Island and New York City. Roughly 350 iPods have been used by 700 to 800 people, said Cohen, who is encouraging schools, libraries and civic groups to collect iPods and iTunes gift cards to donate to nursing homes.

 

A. Holly Patterson, which has had the program since 2006, has 100 iPods in use, Cohen said. Resident Marilyn Richter, 75, a lifelong music lover, said the program helps her to "get away from everything" and blocks out the facility's many noises. But the iPod program has had some other unexpected results, she said.

 

"When it first came out I was like, 'Oh great, this is just for me,' and then I realized that this reaches other people who didn't even care that much about music," she said. "You can reach anyone through music."

 

 

Photo credit: Danielle Finkelstein | Marilyn Richter, 75, of Uniondale, has been a resident in A Holly Patterson Nursing Home in Uniondale since 2004. She enjoys listening to all types of music but says her favorite genre is country.

 

Credit:

Originally published: January 23, 2011 8:06 PM
Updated: January 24, 2011 9:53 AM
By DENISE M. BONILLA  
denise.bonilla@newsday.com