Susan B Geffen's                   
       e-Newsletter Magazine  
  
  • Estate Planning Attorney
  • Gerontologist, Master's USC  
  • Elder Law Attorney
  • Former Elder Law Professor  
  • Book Author of soon to be released,                  "Take That Nursing Home and Shove it!  
September 2012

IN THIS ISSUE
:

Susan's New Book, "TAKE THAT NURSING HOME AND SHOVE IT!" 

Look for it on Amazon, and book signings starting Dec. 2012! 

VIDEO- Susan sings her original song, "Time"  

Coping with Elder Care Challenges"Two smaller, more intimate seminars in Pasadena and Long Beach
 
(see column two for details) 
 
My Watchdog:
Important Pending Legislation To Protect Seniors - Will Gov. Brown Sign It Before The Deadline?

How states are dealing with older drivers -           a sensitive topic and a growing concern 


Susan's Upcoming Seminar:
Saturday, October 20, Burbank Marriott     
FREE Admission. Limited seating.
-----------------------------
Need Help With Elder Care or Elder Law issues? 
Call Susan at 1 (310) 406-0608 or email her, susanbgeffen@gmail.com

Help others.  
My Watchdog

Watchdog  

Alerting you to the latest scams, elder abuse, and things that are just plain WRONG! 

  

Hundreds of bills still await Governor Brown's signature deadline of Sept. 30.  

 

Assembly bills 40, 999 and 1710 aim to protect the health and rights of California's seniors and dependent adults.

 

I am very interested in these bills as seniors have long needed the protections they provide. 

 

These important pieces of legislation were written by state Assemblywoman Mariko Yamada, D-Davis, who is running for Napa's new Assembly District 4 in November.

 

Yamada chairs the Assembly Committee on Aging and Long-Term Care.

AB 40, which was more than two years in the making, would:

 

1)  conform state elder abuse law with the federal Elder Justice Act;

 

2) allow local senior long-term care ombudsmen to share information with law enforcement during investigations of abuse at nursing homes and long-term care facilities;

 

3)  require mandated reporters to file a report with local law enforcement within two hours of witnessing or discovering an incident of abuse that resulted in serious injury. A report to the ombudsman would be required within 24 hours.

 

"It was a very long two-year fight with, frankly, the nursing home industry, which is very powerful," Yamada said of the legislation.

 

In my new book, "Take that nursing home and shove it!" I mention that large conglomerates are buying up nursing homes, but it's not to make improvements in the quality of care they provide.  

 

Yamada reminds us that in California alone, they are a $9 billion industry.    

 

Yamada also wrote AB 999, which would set stricter consumer protection standards for long-term care insurance to better protect policyholders from excessive rate increases.

 

Click here for the rest of the article 

 
 
 
Contact Information:

SAGE Consulting, Inc.
1732 Aviation Blvd, #228
Redondo Beach, California 90278
 
susanbgeffen@gmail.com
Office: (310) 406-0608
Fax:    (310) 773-9263
Watch and listen to Susan sing her enchanting and original song
Susan B Geffen sings
Susan B Geffen sings "Time Has Eluded You"
Susan's Upcoming Events:

 

1) PASADENA - "Coping with Elder Care Challenges"

This Saturday, September 22

10:00 AM to 12 Noon

Pasadena Sheraton

303 Cordova Street, Pasadena, CA 91101  

This event is limited to just 30 people and allows for more interaction between Susan and the audience.   

Free. Refreshments served.  

Click here to register or call 1 (800) 301-1326  

 

2) BURBANK -
"Raising Up Your Parents
"

Saturday, October 20, 2012 

9:00 AM to 1:00 PM 

Elder Care Seminar

Burbank Airport Marriott  

2500 N. Hollywood Way, Burbank, CA 91505

Free. Refreshments served.  

Click here to register or call 1 (800) 301-1326 

 

3) LONG BEACH - "Coping with Elder Care Challenges"    

Saturday, November 10, 2012

10:00 AM to 12 Noon

Long Beach Marriott Renaissance Hotel

111 E. Ocean Blvd, Long Beach, CA 90802

This event is limited to just 30 people and allows for more interaction between Susan and the audience.  

Free. Refreshments served.  

Click here to register or call 1 (800) 301-1326 

   

You must be registered to attend  

any of Susan's seminars. 

 

How States Are Dealing With Older Drivers

If you have been reading my newsletters, you know that I come in contact with many adult children who are concerned about the safety of their elderly parents driving on the roads we all share.  

 

It is a sensitive topic and the dangers are real. Unfortunately, the solutions are not easy to facilitate.  

 

I saw this recent AP Press article and decided to to share it with you.    

 

Jerry Wiseman notices it's harder to turn and check his car's blind spots at age 69 than it was at 50. So the Illinois man and his wife took a refresher driving course, hunting tips to stay safe behind the wheel for many more years - a good idea considering their state has arguably the nation's toughest older-driver laws.

 

More older drivers are on the road than ever before, and an Associated Press review found they face a hodgepodge of state licensing rules that reflect scientific uncertainty and public angst over a growing question: How can we tell if it's time to give up the keys?

 

Thirty states plus the District of Columbia have some sort of older-age requirement for driver's licenses, ranging from more vision testing to making seniors renew their licenses more frequently than younger people.  

 

At what age? That's literally all over the map. Maryland starts eye exams at 40. Shorter license renewals kick in anywhere from age 59 in Georgia to 85 in Texas.

 

The issue attracted new attention when a 100-year-old driver backed over a group of schoolchildren in Los Angeles late last month.  

 

That's a rarity, but with an imminent surge in senior drivers, the federal government is proposing that all states take steps to address what the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration calls "the real and growing problem of older driver safety."

 

Here's the conundrum: "Birthdays don't kill. Health conditions do," said Joseph Coughlin, head of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's AgeLab, which develops technologies to help older people stay active.

 

Healthy older drivers aren't necessarily less safe than younger ones, Coughlin points out. But many older people have health issues that can impair driving, from arthritis to dementia, from slower reflexes to the use of multiple medications.  

 

There's no easy screening tool that licensing authorities can use to spot people with subtle health risks. So some states use birthdays as a proxy for more scrutiny instead.

 

Senior driving is a more complicated issue than headline-grabbing tragedies might suggest. Older drivers don't crash as often as younger ones. But they also drive less.  

 

About 60 percent of seniors voluntarily cut back, avoiding nighttime driving or interstates or bad weather, said David Eby of the University of Michigan's Center for Advancing Safe Transportation throughout the Lifespan.

 

Measure by miles driven, however, and the crash rate of older drivers begins to climb in the 70s, with a sharper jump at age 80, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Only teens and 20-somethings do worse.

 

That rising risk reflects the challenge for families as they try to help older loved ones stay safe but still get around for as long as possible, which itself is important for health.

 

The good news: Fatal crashes involving seniors have dropped over the past decade, perhaps because cars and roads are safer or they're staying a bit healthier, said the Insurance Institute's Anne McCartt.  

 

Yet the oldest drivers, those 85 and up, still have the highest rate of deadly crashes per mile, even more than teens.   

 

And more often than not, they're the victims, largely because they're too frail to survive their injuries.

 

And seniors are about to transform the nation's roadways. Today, nearly 34 million drivers are 65 or older.  

 

By 2030, federal estimates show there will be about 57 million - making up about a quarter of all licensed drivers. The baby boomers in particular are expected to hang onto their licenses longer, and drive more miles, than previous generations.

 

Specialists say more seniors need to be planning ahead like Jerry Wiseman and his wife Sandy.

 

"Absolutely we want to be as good drivers as we can possibly be for as long as we can," said Wiseman, of Schaumburg, Ill.

 

At an AARP course, Wiseman learned exercises to improve his flexibility for checking those blind spots. He takes extra care with left-hand turns, which become riskier as the ability to judge speed and distance wanes with age. He knows to watch for other changes.

 

 Click here for the rest of article