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The Alzheimer's Rate - Completely Mind Boggling

Wouldn't it be great if the Ecumen team members above and thousands of others didn't have to do an Alzheimer's Walk?  Wouldn't it be great if we could close all of our memory care housing?  Wouldn't it be great if the cure for Alzheimer's were here?

We know the answers to those questions.  Now comes new information from the Alzheimer's Association's 2009 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures Report.  This is amazing stuff.  It impacts those kids to the left just as it impact us who are older:

- By 2010, there will be nearly a half million new cases of Alzheimer’s each year. By 2050, that number will double to nearly a million new cases per year.

- As many as 5.3 million people in the United States are living with Alzheimer’s disease.
Every 70 seconds, someone develops Alzheimer’s disease.


- Alzheimer’s is now the seventh-leading cause of death in the United States, surpassing diabetes; it is the fifth-leading cause of death among individuals 65 and older, following heart disease, breast cancer, prostate cancer, and stroke.

-The National Academy of Sciences estimates that an additional 3.5 million health-care workers will be required by 2030 just to maintain current levels of staffing for Alzheimer’s care demands.

- Total healthcare costs are more than three times higher for people with Alzheimer’s and other dementias than for other people age 65 and older.



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Video: Insights on Aging From Ecumen Customers

Ecumen intern Ellen Burkhardt sat down with several Ecumen customers in Maplewood, Minn. and got their insights on aging.  

Questions include: 

- Any insights for people having anxieties about growing older?

- What are keys to successful aging?

- What's your advice for nearing retirement?

- What tips do you have on living fully?

We also invite you to read the insights of our team members and customers in 50 Tips for Aging Gracefully.


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Why are all the REALLY Old People Women?

Sarah Kliff, senior reporter at Newsweek did some interesting research to address the question:  Why are all the really old people women?  Sixty-eight of the 72 known "supercentenarians" (people 110 and older) are female, even though there are more boys than girls born each year. 

Here's what she came up with for reasons - do you agree?  Any others you'd put?  Also, for 50 Ways to Age Gracefully, go here (these are from Ecumen customers and employees)

The danger years
The difference between male and female death rates peaks between ages 20 and 24—during which men are six times as likely to be murdered and five times as likely to die of a non-automobile accident.

Toxic testosterone
The hormone increases levels of bad cholesterol (known as LDL) and decreases levels of good cholesterol (HDL), while estrogen does just the opposite.

Gunplay
Whether it's homicide, suicide, or by accident, men are five times more likely to die by firearms than women.

Drop-dead diseases
Fatal conditions like cancer and heart disease are common among men, while women are more likely to suffer from chronic nonfatal conditions such as arthritis, osteoporosis, and autoimmune disorders.

Overwhelming emotions
The tendency to ignore signs of depression and emotional distress may account for the fact that, between the ages of 75 and 79, men are nine times more likely to commit suicide.


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Mrs. Brady's Tech Support for Older Adults

ActressFlorence Florence Henderson, best known as the mom from The Brady Bunch, launched THE FLOH CLUB last month, a telephone-based technical support service that aims to empower older adults. After years of sticking her head in the sand when it came to computers, one of America's favorite TV moms wanted technology to be simple. "I know a lot of people my age who are real computer buffs," Florence observes. "Still, so many older adults, who did not grow up with this technology, find computers daunting and frustrating." They feel it's beyond their abilities to use computers the way younger people do and are often hesitant to ask for help, not wanting to be a bother. The Floh Club was created to focus on the needs, concerns, and interests of people who didn't grow up with computer technology and uses patient and friendly North American-based support experts.

Floh Club members receive any-time support for computer issues big and small, like setting up a printer, learning to use Facebook, or how to check financial and stock performance online. Membership fees vary - from 24.99/month or $249.99 annually, to a one-time "Empowerment Session" for assistance with something like iPod setup and digital music downloading or how to videoconference with Skype.

Hats off to this 75-year old actress-turned-entrepeneur for helping to empower seniors!  ~Helen Rickman


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Let's Stop These Kind of Stories - Please Join us Today in Support of The CLASS Plan

Please read the excerpt below from this National Public Radio story.  If you want to do help do something about this right now, please join us in doing two things today:

1.  Call (800) 958-5374 before 5 p.m. Central and urge your senators to contact Sen. Harry Reid in support of the CLASS Plan. When you call, the operator will ask you to say your state's name and will then transfer you automatically to one of your senator's offices.

2.  Register for Ecumen's Changing Aging grassroots network here.

Thank you!

Donna Taylor's father was the rock of the family. He was the primary caregiver for his disabled wife and her elderly mother. But he got sick and went into the hospital for 10 days. When he got out, he couldn't walk.

Taylor, 41, and her siblings — all of whom had families and children of their own — helped out. But with three elderly, disabled adults in one house, caregiving got expensive. Taylor says her father was surprised at how quickly the family went through its savings.

"He said, 'I worked and I did the right things. I had a pension and I put money away in savings and I had what I thought were the right insurances and the money didn't go far enough.' It just, it just wasn't enough."

When Insurance Isn't Enough

Like most Americans, Taylor's parents believed that Medicare and their private health insurance would pay all the costs of living in a nursing home. It doesn't. Medicare, the federal health insurance for the elderly and disabled, paid the full cost of her father's first 20 days in a rehabilitation nursing home for therapy to try to get him walking again.

But Medicaid, the state and federal insurance program for the poor, does pay for someone to stay long-term in a nursing home. So Taylor told her father he'd have to spend through the rest of his savings, go into poverty, and qualify for Medicaid.

"If you have ever had to look in the eyes of a 64-year-old man who has now had to live in a nursing home, and it's horrible," she says. "And he never ever made me feel bad about that decision. He never said, 'Donna why'd you do this to me?' But he told me, 'This isn't how it was supposed to work out.'"

Taylor's father died in that Phoenix nursing home last year. The nursing home is part of Arizona Baptist Retirement Centers, where Taylor works as an executive vice president. Taylor thinks her father sort of gave up on life.

Better Options

Proposals written into health care overhaul legislation would help families like Donna Taylor's, says John Rother, of the AARP.

One would encourage states to offer more generous benefits to disabled and elderly people on Medicaid who want to stay in their own homes.

And then, says Rother, there's something that could help millions of people. "The CLASS Act," he says, "which was introduced by the late Sen. Ted Kennedy, is a way of putting into place, gradually, an insurance approach to long-term care as opposed to the welfare-based approach we have today."

Workers would choose whether to have money deducted from their paychecks. The deduction would, on average, come to about $65 a month and, when needed, it would pay about $75 a day, according to estimates by the Congressional Budget Office. That's a little less than half of what one day in a nursing home costs now.

"The CLASS Act is not designed to protect people from the cost of nursing home care, very expensive care," says Rother. "It's really designed to help you stay independent at home and to get the services you need: home care, Meals on Wheels, visiting nurse. The kind of thing people do need very often to be able to continue to live independently, and, you know, I think that's actually what most of us want."


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Please Call Your U.S. Senators on Tuesday, October 13

It takes just seconds  . . . . please call your U.S. Senator today . . . urge them to urge Sen. Harry Reid and make The CLASS Plan  (Community Living Assistance Services and Supports Plan) part of health care reform legislation.  The health care discussion is at a crucial point.  On Tuesday the Senate Finance committee will vote on The Baucus Bill, setting up a future floor vote on health care legislation.  We need to help get The CLASS Plan in there . . .

Your Call-In Number

Our colleagues at the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging (AAHSA) have arranged a toll-free call-in for Tuesday, Oct. 13 from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Eastern. Please call (800) 958-5374. You will then be asked in which state you live and will be patched in to one of your two Senators' offices.

Please urge your Senator to contact Sen. Harry Reid in support of the CLASS plan.

Thank You for taking this action on behalf of people across the country committed to Changing Aging for the better.

Sample Script

(If you're calling Sen. Klobuchar and Sen. Franken from Minnesota, please also thank them for their support of The CLASS Plan.)

Hello. I am calling to ask Senator [INSERT SENATOR's LAST NAME] to contact Sen. Harry Reid and urge him to make sure that the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports (CLASS) provisions are included in the final health care reform legislation. People need help accessing the long-term services and supports required to remain independent and at home. I thank Senator [INSERT LAST NAME] in advance for the support, and I look forward to a response.


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Join Ecumen and AAHSA for a U.S. Senate Call-In Day on Oct. 13th

Help us make long-term services and supports affordable for all Americans.  Join the Ecumen Changing Aging Advocacy Network and join us and others  for a U.S. Senate call-in day on Tuesday, October 13th.

It takes just seconds. 

On Tuesday, October 13th, we will be joining senior services and disability advocates around the country in support of long-term care financing reform.  Our message to our Senators:  Tell Sen. Harry Reid to ensure that the Community Assistance Services and Support plan (CLASS)  is included as part of health care reform.

Thanks to our colleagues at the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging (AAHSA), which is making this call-in day possible.


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When Will Target Stores Embrace Aging?

When will Target Stores, which prides itself as a trend-setter for youth embrace the timeless trend of aging?

Michael Graves gets "design."  But the superstar designer also gets aging and living with the challenges of physical disability.  For years he has put his stamp on new wave tea kettles more than 1,000 other items for Target.  Now he's putting his touch on design for products for seniors and other people living with disabilities through a company called Drive Medical.

Graves, 75, is paralyzed below the waist.  A meningitis bout took away his use of his legs in 2003.  According to a recent AP story, the famed architect says he became "an instant expert" on difficulties facing people with disabilities.

But Graves said his disability was not the reason Drive Medical approached him about designing a new logo, which led to the company asking Graves to design a line of new products in 2004.

"I'm not even sure they knew I was in a wheelchair at the time," Graves recalled.

The line began small in 2006, with a Graves-designed heating pad, and recently expanded to include bath benches and bathtub rails.

Two of those Drive Medical devices are on display at a Minneapolis Institute of Arts exhibit celebrating Graves' 40-plus years as a designer, architect and artist. The exhibition, which opened in late August, is housed in the three-story, $50 million Graves-designed Target Wing addition that opened at the MIA in 2006. Called "From Towers to Teakettles: Michael Graves Architecture and Design," the exhibit runs through Jan. 3, 2010.

One of the Drive Medical devices on display is an adjustable bathtub rail that clamps to the edge of the tub. In contrast to the stainless steel grab rails usually seen in institutional settings, Graves' offering is a soft blue oval ring set onto a metal frame clad in white plastic with a bright orange knob for adjustments.

A sleek silver Graves-designed collapsible cane that folds into a black bag also is on display.

Drive Medical spokesman Edward Link said the Port Washington, N.Y.-based company was looking for an acclaimed designer who could remove the "medicinal look" of health-care products.

Graves has designed about a dozen products for Drive Medical in three areas: bathroom safety, including the bath rail and bath and shower seats, which are now available online and in medical specialty stores; mobility, such as the cane; and aids for daily living, such as reachers. The Graves-designed canes and reachers will be rolled out over the next three to six months.

Graves said his Princeton, N.J.-based design group, which has designed more than 1,800 consumer products, thinks "about the whole community" when it starts any product design.

"We don't treat them differently in terms of the human being that's going to hold it, assemble it," Graves said. "Whether you're a young homeowner or you're in a nursing home ...you can open the jar with our jar opener."

Designs for the disabled need to take into account that not everyone with a disability is the same, Graves said. In his own case, Graves said, he suffered spinal pain after his paralysis, and the first wheelchair and minivan he used did not have the right shock absorbers to cushion against bumps.

"Every day is learning for me because I'm in a wheelchair," Graves said, adding that designing for the disabled is rewarding. "I think for me, it's kind of payback."

Target is not currently carrying any of Grave's new products for seniors and others living with disabilities.   What a missed opportunity by a company that prides itself on being ahead of the curve.


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Marathoner Borrows Catheter On Course to Finish on Top

Jerry Johncock is one determined guy. The 81-year-old marathoner above (2008 photo by Toni Johncock) found himself at mile 21 of Sunday's Twin Cities Marathon having to go to the bathroom.  Here's a summary from Paul Walsh of the Minneapolis Star Tribune:

Johncock, who became the first American 80 or over to break the four-hour mark at last year's Twin Cities Marathon, was overcome with discomfort from a full bladder during this year's race. He knew that a blood clot was preventing him from urinating.

With no catheter at the official aid station on East River Road in St. Paul, staffers there were telling the age-groupchampion runner that he would have to drop out and be taken to a hospital.

"I told them, 'I gotta finish this marathon!'" said Johncock, who has run more than 100 marathons since he took up running at age 50 and has never dropped out.

Then from among the spectators, a middle-aged man piped up. "'I have a catheter in my car,'" Johncock recalled his anonymous rescuer saying.

The medical device was retrieved, Johncock entered the first aid van and "a first aid person helped me poke it into my bladder," allowing him to urinate.

"As soon as I got the catheter, I [urinated] and I was good to go," the retired television repairman said. "Oh, what a relief that was."

And yesterday, he learned that he won't be penalized for stepping of the course for assistance.  He'll soon receive the $225 prize for finishing first in the 80-84 age group.  Congratulations to Jerry Johncock and the Good Samaritan who provided the timely assist.


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Senator Klobuchar and Senator Franken Support The CLASS Act

Thank you to Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar and Senator Al Franken for their support of the national long-term care insurance plan The CLASS Act.  Ecumen is an ardent supporter, too.  It just makes sense.

Kaiser Foundation columnist Howard Gleckman writes in his blog how The CLASS Act is still very much alive.