Senior Health Advocacy

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This summer, you may be spending some time with extended family, even if you’ve “gone virtual.” Have you and your siblings had a conversation about Mom and Dad lately? How are their needs changing? Do they have the advocates they need to ensure their health and safety as they age?

Help Your Senior Loved Ones Get the Care They Need

We all know how difficult it can be to keep track of doctor recommendations, medications, advice, insurance, and costs when we’re dealing with our own medical care. Compound that with the confusion of dementia or reduced short term memory, and a decreased ability to communicate their needs and challenges, and the process for your senior becomes even more daunting. Your loved one depends on someone to help keep the big picture straight.

How can you be an effective advocate for your loved one?

Most importantly, you need to care. When you care about their health and general well-being, you are more inclined to ask the deeper questions, seek out additional opinions, research other approaches, and push back on unnecessary expenses. Other helpful traits to have are good organizational skills, some free time, physical aptitude to bring your senior to and from multiple appointments, and social skills to work with the various health professionals who are collaborating on your senior’s care plan.

“A health advocate can be a spouse, relative, friend, or caregiver that you trust. The older you are, the more important it is to have another person with you during visits. Having two people hear the discussion and making sure they understand is much better than just one set of ears.” – John Burton, MD, Johns Hopkins expert

Health advocates, whether they are paid professionals, free placements, or family members, provide several services:

  • Coordinate with Medicaid, Medicare, and insurance companies
  • Help get the patient to doctor visits, testing, and procedures
  • Track prescriptions and help ensure they take proper amounts at correct times
  • Research alternative therapies and treatments & discuss options with the senior and their medical team
  • Make sure that things like Power of Attorney and Living Wills are in place

Paid advocates can provide the following additional help:

  • A complete assessment with care recommendations (usually completed in the senior’s home)
  • Assistance finding appropriate housing and transitioning to the new living environment such as an assisted living facility
  • Reviewing all bills from medical professionals, hospitals, and insurance companies for accuracy
  • Identifying and securing community services such as Meals on Wheels, adult daycare, or wheelchair transportation services
  • Handling paperwork to ensure service delivery

In addition, seniors often need the daily personal health advocacy provided by checking in on their routine, health, weight and mobility, and prescriptions. Assisting Hands Home Care serving Columbus, OH professional caregivers can help with medication reminders, providing transportation to doctors and pharmacies, and can be that companion and “check in” your senior needs. And, before we set up your home care schedule, one of our care managers does a complete assessment to make sure your loved one’s needs are met. Our caregivers are also trained to look for home safety hazards  another important part of keeping your elderly family members secure.

Medication Management

One of the most important ways to advocate for your senior daily is helping with medication. Keep an eye out for these deterrents to taking their medications appropriately:

  • Brainstorm creative ways that will help them remember to take the medications – alarms, notes, or pill boxes.
  • Sometimes they simply can’t see well enough to read the correct dosing. Ask the pharmacist to print the labels in large print.
  • They may not want to admit that they can’t hear the instructions the pharmacist or doctor is giving them. Be their ears.
  • Can they open the bottles easily and are the pills pre-split? Do they need your help administering eye drops or inhaled medications?
  • If your loved one has difficulty swallowing, follow up with their medical team to determine if there is a liquid, patch, or other form of dosing that can be used.

Questions for the Medical Team about Medications & Treatment

You are an extension of your senior’s mind and spirit, and will be able to be a better advocate for their health when in the doctor’s office or at the pharmacy. Here are some important questions to ask:

  • How will I know that the treatment is working?
  • What are the potential side effects?
  • How will this medicine interact with other medications that my loved one is taking?
  • What is the cost of the medicine or treatment prescribed? Are there less expensive alternatives?
  • Do you have written information about the treatment that we can take home?

Need Help?

Contact us today and learn how we can add life to the years of your loved one – while taking the stress off you. When you are confident about your aging loved one’s care, you’ll be able to enjoy your relationship with them in the best way possible.

 

Sources: ClearCare, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Love to Know, Institute on Aging, Family Caregiver Alliance