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OAS InspiredCare Blog
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Dysphagia and How It Affects the Elderly
Long Term Care Insurance
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Myths About Hospice & Palliative Care: Separating Fact From Fiction
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The Power of Exercise for Seniors with Neurological Conditions
All You Need To Know About Frontotemporal Dementia: Symptoms, Causes, And Treatment
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While companion caregivers are not medical professionals, many are trained in first aid and emergency protocols, ensuring they can respond appropriately to accidents or urgent situations until medical help arrives.
Yes, care plans are flexible and can be adjusted as your loved one’s needs change, ensuring they always receive the appropriate level of support.
Yes, home care plans can be tailored to fit individual needs, whether it’s a few hours a day of personal care or full-time medical assistance. This flexibility helps ensure the right level of support for each person.
Yes, elder home care services can be fully customized based on the individual’s health conditions, personal preferences, and level of care required. Open Arms Solutions conducts an assessment to create a personalized care plan that adjusts as needs change.
Yes, post-op care significantly reduces the risk of complications, such as infections or falls, that can lead to hospital readmission. By ensuring proper recovery management, post-op care helps patients heal safely and effectively at home.
Hospice care doesn’t mean giving up; it’s about focusing on comfort and quality of life rather than aggressive treatments that may no longer be effective. Patients can still receive care that alleviates symptoms and pain, but the aim is not to cure the illness.
Caregivers typically work in shifts of 8-12 hours to ensure your loved one has constant care without any breaks in service.
Ask about their qualifications, experience, and references to evaluate a provider. Visiting the facility or observing in-home care sessions is also a good idea to ensure they meet your standards.
Signs that a loved one may need home care include difficulty performing daily tasks, worsening medical conditions, increased forgetfulness or confusion, and social isolation. Home care may be the right solution if a family member is struggling to live independently.
There are many factors involved in determining when is the right time for in-home care, or if it is the best choice for your family.
The best way to gauge if now is the time to start in-home care assistance is to schedule a free, no-obligation, in-home care assessment. This assessment will help you properly guage if it is time to take the next step.
Signs that your loved one may need home care include difficulty managing daily tasks like cooking or cleaning, frequent falls or mobility issues, missed medications, poor hygiene, weight loss due to improper nutrition, and increased isolation or loneliness.
Open Arms Solutions provides regular updates on care progress and allows family members to communicate with caregivers. It’s important to establish open communication, set expectations, and schedule periodic check-ins to ensure your loved one is receiving the highest quality of care.
24-hour care involves caregivers working in shifts to provide constant care without breaks, while live-in care typically involves one caregiver staying with the client, but they have designated rest and sleep periods.
Companion care focuses on emotional support, social interaction, and helping with daily activities, while personal care involves more hands-on assistance with hygiene and dressing.
Home care allows individuals to receive personalized support in the comfort of their home, maintaining a higher level of independence. In contrast, assisted living facilities or nursing homes provide care in a communal setting, often with 24-hour supervision. Home care is generally more flexible and can be tailored to the specific needs of the individual.
Respite care can vary in duration, ranging from a few hours to several weeks, depending on the needs of the caregiver and the care recipient. It can be scheduled regularly or used occasionally for specific events or emergencies.
Hospice care is available as long as a physician certifies that the patient has a terminal illness with a life expectancy of six months or less. If the patient lives longer than six months but continues to meet the eligibility criteria, hospice care can be extended.
The duration of post-op care depends on the type of surgery, the patient’s age, overall health, and how quickly they recover. Care can range from a few days to several weeks or months, depending on the complexity of the surgery and individual needs.
Home care can be tailored to fit any schedule, ranging from a few hours a week to 24-hour, around-the-clock care. The level of care depends on your loved one’s needs and the care provider’s services.
Our care plans range from hourly care up to 24/7 and can be changed based on clients changing needs.
Companion care services can be customized to the individual’s needs, ranging from a few hours a day to 24/7 care, depending on their preferences and the level of support required.
No, hospice care is available for individuals with any terminal illness, including heart disease, lung disease, dementia, stroke, and kidney failure, among others. The focus is on comfort care for anyone with a life-limiting condition.
No, respite care can also provide relief for professional caregivers or anyone who provides ongoing care to an individual. It’s designed to offer breaks for anyone in a caregiving role, regardless of their relationship to the care recipient.
Most seniors prefer to remain in the comfort of their own home as they age. While senior facilities can offer extensive services and community, research supports that at home is best. Seniors who remain in their own home with a nurturing, supportive environment will continue to be more socially engaged, physically active and achieve a greater state of wellbeing.
However, this usually puts a good deal of strain on the family to take on the ever-increasing caregiver responsibilities for seniors as they age — especially those with chronic conditions such as Dementia or Parkinson’s.
Opting for in-home care assistance relieves the family of many of these duties. Additionally, our in-home care provides one-on-one individualized care and caregiving expertise that families often need as their loved ones’ condition becomes more challenging.
A chronic condition is a human health condition or disease that is persistent or otherwise long-lasting in its effects, or a disease that comes with time. Common chronic conditions in seniors include Dementia, Parkinson’s, ALS, stroke, COPD or CHF.
Chronic care conditions such as the ones listed above have sensitive needs and often present more challenges for caregivers. We focus our caregiver training and design our caregiving programs specifically to address these sensitive needs.
We help clients and their families transform painful experiences into inspired, meaningful experiences. We go above and beyond in our program design and method to ensure the highest life quality. We do this by looking deeply at the whole client, the whole care team, and the whole program experience.
Post-op home care assists with daily activities and medical needs during recovery. At the same time, rehabilitation services like physical or occupational therapy are specialized to help restore mobility, strength, or functionality after surgery.
Home care refers to non-medical assistance, such as help with daily tasks, while home health care involves medical services provided by licensed professionals, such as nurses or therapists.
Even before training, we invest in making sure that we recruit caregivers who share our passion for senior care. We look for those who demonstrate values that we believe are critical to creating meaningful caregiving experiences.
Additionally, all Open Arms Solutions Caregivers have at least 1 years of experience working with seniors in some capacity and a minimum of six months of prior senior caregiving.
During the onboarding process, they go through a company-specific orientation. This training covers many personal care topics including:
- The latest transferring techniques
- Background on the most common chronic conditions such as Dementia and Parkinson’s
- Strategies to handle challenging client situations
- All required training by the Illinois Department of Public Health.
Open Arms Solutions care professionals also undergo online training annually, including Dementia and Parkinson’s care training, to stay current on the latest techniques and strategies.