Archive for the ‘Alzheimer's’ Category
The difference between wandering and lost is a disease.
The Alzheimer’s Foundation of America (AFA) has just released a step-by-step educational DVD about wandering. In the 43-minute DVD, experts and family caregivers address the difference between wandering and becoming lost, prevention strategies and measures to take when a crisis occurs. For more information and to purchase the DVD, visit www.alzfdn.org/estore or call toll-free 866.AFA.8484.
The art of senile dementia
Willem De Kooning, the great 20th century abstract exressionist, noticed that he was having problems remembering things. His wife Elaine, wrote to him warning that despite his good physical health that he would soon be a vegetable. Though painful, the remark was darkly truthful. deKooning was a victim of Alzheimer’s and was going to lose his genius, his memory and his will. Yet his genius persisted allwong him to create more than three hundred works in the decade before he succumbed.
Curiously a panel of curators was establishied to determine the value of De Kooning’s contribution because his dementia should surely have impacted his genius. Even more curious was the lack of a similar inquiry in the 50’s and 60’s to evaluate the works he created as an alcholic.
The stigma of dementia afflicts all of us… rendering us as vacant as a blank canvas. The vacancy left by those lost memories means that we may wander and need assistance finding the path home. To that seeming simple challenge of remembering our address, thirty satellites circumnavigating the globe send the location of lost love ones carrying Personal Location Systems notifying caregivers of their precise location before the paint dries.
Forget Me Not
Every 7 seconds someone, somewhere turns 50. Of that number, hundreds of thousands of loving fathers, mothers, sons and daughters are realizing that they may become a victim of Alzhiemer’s.
The journey to the golden years will mark more than twice as many women as men with the as yet incurable curse of dementia…why women? Statistically they live longer and so have more years to contract the disease. More over, their 9.8 million family and unpaid care givers will provide 8.4 billion hours of care. Can you calculate what those numbers will be over the course of the next decade as the millions of baby boomers reach 65?
The Technology Pavilion at the Life@50+ National AARP Event & Expo Washington, DC, September 4–6, 2008 will include a “Nana” Technology© booth, hosted by Andrew Carle, a national expert on senior care and technology, and an Assistant Professor in the College of Health and Human Services at George Mason University. Professor Carle acts as an advisor to GTX Corp, specifically targeting the development of applications for location aware devices to assist the home bound elderly who are memory impaired. He has coined the term “Nana” to describe helpful technologies for older adults and the role such technologies will play in meeting the needs of aging Baby Boomers.