Category 'Pain Management'

Check Out Recent Home Care Industry News

The June edition of the Caring Right at Home e-newsletter contains information, advice and support for adult caregiving.

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Living With Rheumatoid Arthritis

Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic form of arthritis. Although it usually occurs in middle age, its onset also can occur in the elderly.

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What Is Palliative Care?

Many people associate palliative care with end-of-life hospice care, but palliative care is offered at any stage of disease and can supplement curative treatment.

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House Calls Are Making a Comeback

A new federal program called the Independence at Home Demonstration will test the effectiveness of providing healthcare to thousands of chronically ill Medicare patients in their own homes, allowing them to remain there instead of potentially entering long-term care facilities.

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Drug Reactions in Older Adults

Medications help prevent and treat illness and disease, but increasingly among seniors, certain medications are causing adverse drug reactions.

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Younger Adults Have Difficulty Coping with Cancer in Downers Grove, Illinois

Younger adult cancer patients have the most difficulty coping with the pain and emotional issues of cancer, in spite of their potentially better survival odds.

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Club gives writer a special place to muse

As a freelance writer with a home office (the dining room table), I often need some "chill-out space" away from home to get some real work done, and finding it has been a challenge. Starbucks and Panera Bread are great every so often. The library is quiet, but boring. Then I came across a place called "the Club" totally by coincidence.As I'm about to pull out of the circular drive, Sonia comes running out from the Club entrance. "Jimmy, I think you forgot this," she yelled, waving my cell phone. As she reaches through the passenger-side window to hand it to me, I can't help but notice the embroidered name on her white work-smock uniform: "Dr. Sonia Baweja, hematology/oncology, Edward Cancer Centers, Edward Hospital and Health Services." "Thanks Doc. See ya next week for another chemo-colada cocktail and a new article for my column that you just gotta read."

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Family Caregivers Can Overcome the Challenges of Chronic Pain; New Resource Helps Meet Challenges of Caring for Loved Ones with Chronic Pain

The National Family Caregivers Association (NFCA) has teamed up with the national pain management education program, Partners Against Pain, and advocate and author Lee Woodruff to create the new Caregiver Cornerstones resource. Caregiver Cornerstones provides information, encouragement, and tools to help family caregivers meet the unique challenges of caring for loved ones suffering from chronic pain, such as making sure your loved one receives appropriate assessment and treatment of their pain. Experts estimate pain affects 76 million Americans, more people than diabetes, coronary heart disease, and cancer combined. Pain can interfere with daily routine activities and those affected may need help from family and friends. Unfortunately, there has been little information and few resources available to help family caregivers cope with these problems - until now. The four Caregiver Cornerstones are:

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At the End of Life,They Offer Comfort

EVERY MORNING, CHRISSY Gresham rests her hand on the list of people she'll be visiting and whispers a prayer. "Please, God," she says,"let me touch the lives of the patients and families I see today." She doesn't have much time to touch those lives either. Gresham, 31, is a hospice nurse, which means that all of her patients are going to die, and soon. Her job is to help them do so comfortably and with as much dignity as possible. "In the hospital, it's always fight , fight , fight to keep people going," she says. But after six years on a neurosurgical ward, Gresham thought that fight often seemed only to extend pain-wracked lives for a few more miserable days or weeks in a sterile, unfamiliar place. Her goal for her patients now? "A peaceful death at home, surrounded by the people they love," she says. "I was called to do this. I truly believe that." She was called to the ever-expanding field of compassionate care. In 2008, an estimated 1.45 million Americans were treated in 4850 hospice programs--up from only 25,000 patients in 1982, according to the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO), which estimates that nearly 40% of U.S. deaths in 2008 were in a hospice setting, usually at home. And as Baby Boomers age, "the demographics are going to explode ," says Naomi Naierman, president and CEO of the American Hospice Foundation (AHF).

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New osteoporosis research

'Low acceptance of treatment in the elderly for the secondary prevention of osteoporotic fracture in the acute rehabilitation setting,' is newly published data in Aging. "Given the high risk of subsequent fracture among elderly persons with fracture, it is important to initiate secondary treatment for osteoporosis. Acute rehabilitation centers may offer a unique opportunity to introduce treatment,"

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