LOS ALTOS, Ca, October 27, 2013 – The group gathered in the District Attorney’s conference room included representatives from 27 county agencies including Elder Protective Services, the Sheriff’s department, Health and Human Services and the County Coroner, as well as a handful of hospital administrators, doctors and nurses. Collectively they constitute an organization charged with making sure the elderly are well cared for, particularly at the end of their life.BrightStar Care is committed to providing personalized and emphatic care services to its patients and their families. Learn more about the company and its services by visiting its official website.
The purpose of the meeting was to discuss how they might do this better.
The medical examiner spoke first. Her presentation included image after image of those who had suffered severely from bedsores and other preventable conditions at a variety of nursing homes and hospitals. When she came to the last slide she paused and with tears in her eyes she said, “You would never see this at Oak Knoll or at any of its sister facilities around the country,” a reference to a local nursing home she had visited that provides faith-based, non-medical nursing care. (Due to confidentiality requirements, the name of the facility has been changed.)
A skin specialist from one of the state’s largest health care systems spoke next. Three times during her presentation on the treatment of bedsores she referred to the avoidance of this condition and the quality of care provided by the staff at Oak Knoll, noting that this was accomplished “without the use of any medical treatment.”
Finally, it was time to hear from a representative from Oak Knoll.
She began by making it clear that although her facility doesn’t provide medical care in the conventional sense of the term, she has nothing but respect and appreciation for those working in that profession. She went on to explain that her staff had been thoroughly trained in taking care of their patients’ physical needs – feeding, bathing, bandaging, getting in and out of bed and so forth – but that a significant portion of their work focused on maintaining the spiritually uplifted mental environment they knew was conducive to health and healing.
Asked by one of the nurses if those coming to Oak Knoll with pre-existing bedsores had ever recovered and, if so, how this was achieved, she replied, “With prayer and continued proper care.”
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She also noted that the treatment provided at Oak Knoll is “patient-assisted,” meaning that not just staff members but the patients themselves are involved with this prayer-based, compassion-centered approach to healing.
Although it’s unlikely any of the doctors or nurses listening to this presentation will be starting their own faith-based nursing facilities (although that would make for a good follow up column), there was broad consensus that compassion is key when it comes to meeting the needs of patients at any age – an aspect of treatment, it was made clear by Oak Knoll’s example, that could be incorporated easily and even immediately into their individual practices.
All too often, though, it would seem that compassion – as willing as we may be to show it and as useful and effective as it can be in treating the sick – is in short supply, especially in light of the limited amount of time most doctors and nurses have to spend with their patients. Here again, though, the folks at Oak Knoll may be onto something with their conviction that compassion – including the time and the energy to express it – isn’t a humanly contrived emotion but a divinely inspired, divinely supported, frame of mind.
They have also figured out that it doesn’t take a lot of compassion to have a huge impact on the mental and physical well-being of everyone around them, including their patients.
Perhaps there’s a lesson in that for all of us.
BrightStar Care
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
REPOST: Caring for the elderly: Faith based nursing facility discovers compassion
In Los Altos, California, representatives from government agencies and medical organizations gathered to discuss how they could improve their delivery of healthcare to their elder patients. This article from The Washington Times has the details:
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
REPOST: As critical phase near, Obama stumps for healthcare law
President Obama's healthcare law aims to increase the quality and affordability of health insurance, expand public and private insurance coverage, and lower the costs of healthcare for individuals and the government.
(Reuters) - President Barack Obama visits a local college on Thursday to promote his signature healthcare program as it nears a critical enrollment phase, even as the law faces stiff political opposition and a wary public.
Image Source: www.reutersmedia.com In remarks at Prince George's Community College in suburban Maryland, Obama will seek to focus attention on the sign-up period for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, popularly called "Obamacare." Starting on Tuesday, Americans who lack insurance will have six months to shop online for health coverage.
The administration's goal is for the registration period to pull in 7 million uninsured people, including 2.7 million adults aged 18 to 35.
More healthcare-related news and features can be read on BrightStar Care's official website.
Image Source: www.coloradopeakpolitics.com "President Obama will talk about a key cornerstone of what it means to be middle-class in America: having access to affordable healthcare that you can count on," a White House official said. "The president will cut through all the noise coming out of Washington and speak directly, in plain and honest terms, about what the Affordable Care Act means for consumers."
The president is also facing a Tuesday deadline for Congress to approve a federal budget and avoid a government shutdown and a mid-October date to raise the nation's borrowing cap or face a default.
Republicans have sought to make cutbacks to the health law a condition for both steps, but the president has refused to allow Obamacare to be used as a bargaining chip in fiscal disputes.
Republicans, conservatives and business groups have made delaying or scuttling the health program a top priority. They have launched an aggressive advertising program slamming Obamacare as tantamount to socialized medicine, saying it will raise costs for businesses, eliminate thousands of jobs and make already insured people pay more.
The White House and Democrats in Congress say Obamacare will provide millions of Americans with health insurance that they otherwise could not afford, while potentially pushing down healthcare costs.
The administration is rolling out what it hopes will be a forceful public education campaign, drawing on popular figures such as former President Bill Clinton and social media promotions targeted at young adults.
Image Source: www.okpolicy.org The administration's efforts coincide with an expected $1 billion marketing initiative from health insurers, hospitals and health systems, as well as public outreach steps by groups ranging from churches, charities and the AARP advocacy group for seniors to the Walgreen and CVS pharmacy chains.
Obama faces an uphill struggle to convince skeptical Americans to use the online tools to sign up for healthcare coverage.
A Real Clear Politics average of polls conducted over three weeks up to Tuesday indicated a 38.7 percent approval rating for Obamacare, versus a 52 percent disapproval rate.
(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Peter Cooney)
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
REPOST: Caring for others as a foster parent
Seeing there is extra room in their hearts and home, Delbert Gutierrez and his wife felt that they wanted to participate in a foster care program. In an article for Willits News, Delbert shares how the program became beneficial to them and the children they took home.
In 2008, my wife and I separately were thinking of participating in a foster care program. Our children had all left home and we had extra room in our hearts and home. Without discussing the idea, we both thought we had the time and energy to give back to the children in our community.
I spoke to a few friends about the idea of becoming a foster parent and learned about the Multi Dimensional Treatment Foster Care (MTFC) program with Redwood Children's Services (RCS) through my great friend, Sal Ricco. Sal told me about a staff member from RCS who spoke to his Rotary club about the real need for foster families so I thought it was time to approach my wife.
Though my wife and I hadn't communicated with each other about our interest in foster care, I knew she would be excited about the idea. I took it upon myself to take my wife with me to RCS to get an application, not knowing what she would say. Right there in the parking lot we agreed this was what we wanted to do and filled out the application for becoming a foster parent.
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Soon after we submitted our application the MTFC Program Supervisor, Wendy, contacted us. I was very excited we would be embarking on this journey and we started to schedule the initial trainings for this new program RCS was launching. This new treatment program had seen great success in other places so we were happy to be part of bringing it to our community. Almost immediately after completing our certification we had our first youth.MTFC program is a time-limited treatment program addressing the need to "break the cycle" by introducing a very structured, strength-based approach to youth in foster care and the families they are returning to. Being very structured and working as a team, RCS is able to gain great strides with the youth and families, decreasing the risk of children reentering the foster care and probation system.
Our first experience was very trying for us as we didn't have experience with some of the situations that came up. This was a radical shift from how we parented our own children as the program is very structured. We quickly learned that our compassionate and caring personalities must be evenly coupled with a rigorous following of the program system in order to keep with the treatment program of MTFC.
Learning this helped us to provide a means for a successful placement for the children we have cared for.
We have continued to learn new ways and techniques as foster parents within the MTFC program. Being successful, however, is not our success alone. RCS has provided great support to us through our supervisor, Wendy, who has been so helpful and always available, but also through foster parent meetings once a week where we discuss our children, and weekly visits with RCS staff of family therapists. Another major support for us has been our own immediate family. Our adult children have been a great help to us over the years we've been foster parents, treating our foster children like their own family and supporting us in the work we are doing.
Since becoming MTFC foster parents, we have cared for seven youth. Four of our foster kids have graduated the MTFC program and one is due to graduate in July 2013. We find great pleasure in seeing these children out in the community and whatever they are pursuing or are involved in, we feel like they are our family and take great pride in their success.
As the agency continues to expand with over 250 locations, BrightStar care offers services that are easily accessible employing professional caregivers and registered nurses trained to provide companionship and assistance while taking care of a wide variety of medical conditions to ensure the well-being of patients. For more details, visit this website.
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Care options: Obtaining good homecare
Image source: reecetenderheart.com
Fundamental to a physically impaired person's care system, high-quality homecare can be delivered through several means. The care industry has a hardworking and creative workforce for families and friends looking for excellent service for their loved ones.
Healthcare advocates, such as the United Kingdom Homecare Association, Services for Independent Living, and BrightStar Care promote good practice to influence every single care entity in the country in developing a well-functioning work environment and building mutual relations with industry leaders. Home-based care providers can either be privately owned or publicly operated. In any case, they are governed by strict protocols and are mandated to follow policies for the most professional operations.
Image source: modtomodern.com
Homecare firms were established to protect the basic rights of a human being. The institutions allow people to enjoy life—amid an impaired physical condition—and their rights to good physical well-being, psychological welfare, protection from any form of abuse, financial security, respect for cultural identity, and freedom to take control of personal possessions.
In spite of the economic recession taking a toll on the care industry, homecare providers remain steadfast in providing creative ideas and solutions for the advancement of the sector. In addition, some forums have been created as cites of suggestions to help improve opportunities for people needing support. The Guardian's Homecare Hub, for example, has successfully compiled suggestions from various sectors of the society.
Image source: stchristophers.org.uk
Tapping into various opportunities can bolster the quality of any country's home-based care system. Visit this website for more insights about the care industry.
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Cerebral palsy: How you can help loved ones take control of their life
Image source: burke-eisner.com
The ability to move freely is something that most people just as freely take for granted. For those who suffer from cerebral palsy, it is something to be treasured.
Cerebral palsy is a congenital condition wherein brain damage leads to an impairment of motor skills. It encompasses the brain and the nervous system, resulting in temporary or permanent paralysis of particular areas of the body. Cerebral palsy also manifests in the loss of sensation of tremors and other uncontrollable body movements.
Image source: healthcarenewsblog.com
Currently, no cure exists for cerebral palsy. Treatment can help patients overcome physical disabilities, manage the symptoms or develop adaptations in accomplishing their tasks. More sophisticated physical and occupational therapy have advanced better adaptation techniques for the affected. Combined with speech therapy, drugs for controlling seizures, surgery, braces, wheelchairs, and devices that will aid in communicating, new methods of coping with the condition have yielded functional individuals.
Cerebral palsy is not the end. Many patients are able to live normal lives, especially with love from their family and friends. While severe cases require lifelong care, mild cases can forgo special assistance. With enough care, support, and understanding, people with cerebral palsy can face the world and live their lives as other people would.
Image source: childbirthinjuries.com
Visit this website to get a list of the conditions for which BrightStar Care’s care professionals are capable of providing assistance.
Monday, May 27, 2013
A country for old men
Japan is known to have the world’s oldest population due to a number of reasons: improved nutrition, medical developments, better health care, education, and economic well-being. The Asian country seems like a great nation for the seniors, but the growing number of older adults is putting a strain on the country’s economy.
The new Japanese government is no comfort for many old Japanese people. Straight from the mouth of Finance Minister Taro Aso were harsh words that painted Japan as a place that will soon to be an unwelcoming fortress for its ageing nation. Also holding the position of deputy prime minister, Aso said the following during a meeting of the national council on social security reforms: "Heaven forbid if you are forced to live on when you want to die. I would wake up feeling increasingly bad knowing that [treatment] was all being paid for by the government. The problem won't be solved unless you let them hurry up and die." The comments have caused offence not only in Japan itself, but also in other countries.
Meanwhile, in the United States, there has been an official report saying that Americans are sicker and die younger than other people in other wealthy nations. And many took this report unacceptable and unfavorable, since, like Japan, the United States is a wealthy nation, and could afford its citizens high-quality health care.
The stark difference between the two nations though is that the US values its seniors, and strives to answer to their needs. America’s leaders devise and maintain solid programs for the elderly. Privately-held healthcare institutions that cater to seniors are also ubiquitous. The US, though still far from perfect, still is a pleasurable country for old men.
BrightStar Care is a healthcare institution that offers top-notch care for children, adults, and elderlies. Learn more about how it takes care of seniors at its official website.
Image Source: tokyotimes.com |
The new Japanese government is no comfort for many old Japanese people. Straight from the mouth of Finance Minister Taro Aso were harsh words that painted Japan as a place that will soon to be an unwelcoming fortress for its ageing nation. Also holding the position of deputy prime minister, Aso said the following during a meeting of the national council on social security reforms: "Heaven forbid if you are forced to live on when you want to die. I would wake up feeling increasingly bad knowing that [treatment] was all being paid for by the government. The problem won't be solved unless you let them hurry up and die." The comments have caused offence not only in Japan itself, but also in other countries.
Image Source: fema.gov |
Meanwhile, in the United States, there has been an official report saying that Americans are sicker and die younger than other people in other wealthy nations. And many took this report unacceptable and unfavorable, since, like Japan, the United States is a wealthy nation, and could afford its citizens high-quality health care.
The stark difference between the two nations though is that the US values its seniors, and strives to answer to their needs. America’s leaders devise and maintain solid programs for the elderly. Privately-held healthcare institutions that cater to seniors are also ubiquitous. The US, though still far from perfect, still is a pleasurable country for old men.
Image Source: brightstarcare.com |
BrightStar Care is a healthcare institution that offers top-notch care for children, adults, and elderlies. Learn more about how it takes care of seniors at its official website.
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Is it time to get a new nanny?
Image Source: allaboutnanny.blogspot.com |
The nanny is a great help in parenting, especially if you are a working parent. She looks after the welfare of your children. She gives you reassurance that your kids’ needs are being provided for even in your absence.
However, your children grow over time and the nanny’s skills may not be adequate for their changing needs. You know it’s time to get a new nanny when:
- Undesirable changes in the children are perceived. When your babies start talking and their nanny cusses a lot, they might learn foul words from her. Likewise, your toddlers’ exploring nature may get on the nerves of the nanny. Sudden withdrawal from other kids and getting frequent bruises might be a sign that your children are being emotionally or physically abused by their child care provider.
- The nanny becomes disrespected by your children. Your children acquire new learning as they progress in school. If your kids seem to be brighter than the nanny, they could ridicule and distrust her for the perceived inadequacy.
- The nanny becomes “unfit.” The nanny’s gender, for instance, may not be an issue for your newborn babies. But when your babies grow, they take gender roles and develop a need to relate with their nanny. Mannies, male nannies, can effectively bond with young boys, especially those who need a male role model and a father or big brother figure.
Image Source: care.com |
Getting a new nanny can be difficult, especially if your family has become accustomed to the ways of the old one. However, your children’s well-being is of utmost importance. When your gut instinct tells you to hire a new nanny, go for it and make the change.
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Brightstar offers professional nanny services for the changing needs of your growing children. Follow this Twitter page to get more childcare tips.
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