Holiday
Gifts for Caregivers Should Provide
Much-Needed Respite, Make Caregiving Easier
Newswise, December 16, 2011– With an
estimated 65 million caregivers in the U.S.,
many Americans have at least one on their
holiday gift list. Family members and
friends can choose gifts that will make
caregiving easier and provide a much-needed
respite from the often overwhelming demands
of caregiving, according to Michael Noe, MD,
associate dean for community relations and
clinical affairs in the University at
Buffalo School of Public Health and Health
Professions.
“The caregiver role is probably one of the
most stressful roles that an individual can
be involved in, particularly when it
involves caring for someone with Alzheimer’s
disease or other causes of dementia,” says
Noe. “Anything that a friend or family
member can do to acknowledge that stress and
help the caregiver deal with it, essentially
caring for the caregiver, will make an
enormous difference.”
Noe and Miriam R. Callahan, project
coordinator, Caregiver Resource Center, Erie
County Senior Services, and a clinical
assistant professor of social and preventive
medicine at UB, locally implemented Powerful
Tools for Caregivers, a very popular and
effective joint project of the UB School of
Public Health and Health Professions and the
Erie County Caregiver Coalition that helps
family caregivers deal with the stresses and
challenges of caregiving.
Noe and Callahan say that it is critical
that loved ones better understand and help
ease the intense pressures with which
caregivers struggle on a daily basis. They
say that good holiday gifts for caregivers
are:
1. The gift of time. Offer to stay with and
care for the care recipient so that the
caregiver can have some time alone to do
anything he or she wants to do by
themselves. “Don’t just say you’ll do it,
make it a formal, specific promise,” advises
Callahan. She suggests creating a
personalized gift certificate that states
the date(s) when you will take care of the
loved one, and for how long.
2. A chance to be pampered. Because of the
constant attention that many care recipients
require, the caregiver typically puts all of
the care recipients’ needs first. A gift
certificate for a massage, a visit to a spa
or salon and then offering to stay with the
care recipient or arranging for someone else
to stay with the care recipient provides the
caregiver with a much-needed opportunity to
relax and unwind.
3. Movie tickets or a dinner out. Make
arrangements to have the care recipient
taken care of while you treat the caregiver
to dinner in a restaurant or to a show.
“Often, the caregiver who is so involved
with caregiving needs a nudge to get out and
do something on their own and you can
provide that gift,” says Callahan.
4. Housecleaning, snowplowing or landscaping
service. Any type of service that allows a
professional to take care of something that
the caregiver would ordinarily do can ease
the caregiver’s burden.
5. Attendance at the Powerful Tools for
Caregivers program. This six-week
educational program, which attendees have
called “transformative,” provides caregivers
with the tools they need to take care of
themselves. The six, weekly 2.5 hour
sessions help caregivers learn how to reduce
their stress, improve self-confidence,
better communicate feelings and locate
helpful resources. “A great gift idea would
be to arrange care for the care recipient so
that a caregiver can attend the sessions,”
says Callahan, who also is a master PTC
trainer. The sessions are especially helpful
when two siblings or a caregiver and adult
child attend them together, she says.
Gifts that Ease Caregiving
1. Portable grab bars. These bars, which
attach to any wall surface, can help a care
recipient who has trouble with balance or
walking, or just getting out of a chair.
Some are also load-bearing grab bars, which
can support a person’s weight, while some
are primarily for balance.
2. Lazy Susan. The same type of device that
makes getting spice jars out of a cabinet
easier has been adapted to make getting into
and out of a car easier for people who have
mobility issues. This lightweight cushion
has a swivel on its base so it can be put
onto the car seat and when the person is
seated on it, it easily swivels them into
the proper position for sitting in the
passenger seat.
3. Respite videos. These videos are
specifically designed for the individual
with Alzheimer’s disease or dementia. The
videos engage the person who is watching,
asking them simple questions and discussing
pleasant subjects, such as schooltime or
childhood memories. They are often engaging
enough to allow the caregiver time to tend
to another task. These videos are often
available to borrow from the Alzheimer’s
Association and similar organizations.
4. Baby monitors. For the caregiver, a baby
monitor can become an extremely valuable
item, allowing him or her to leave the care
recipient in another room while he or she
tends to another task or even goes outside
to garden for a brief period. New versions
of baby monitors have both audio and video
functions, allowing the caregiver to see if
their loved one is staying safe, while they
are doing something else.
5. Identical copies of favorite items.
Callahan and Noe suggest that care
recipients can become preoccupied with a
particular piece of clothing or a favorite
item, such as keys or a wallet. When these
items become lost or misplaced, or need to
be washed, the care recipient can become
agitated or nervous. It can make things much
easier for the caregiver if there are extra
copies of the exact same thing, so that the
care recipient won’t notice when the item is
washed or misplaced.
6. Adaptive clothing. For the disabled care
recipient who cannot easily be dressed,
adaptive clothing available online and
through organizations, such as the
Alzheimer’s Association, can make it easier
for the caregiver to accomplish daily
dressing activities.
7. Activity aprons and Twiddle-Muffs. These
items can help calm the care recipient who
may require tactile stimulation. They
include different textures, such as soft and
hard, bumpy and smooth; they also may
include zippers and large, easy to handle
buttons that are easily done and undone.
8. Alzheimer’s-proofing the house. Erie
County offers a free service, where skilled
staff from the Erie County Dept. of Senior
Services will provide a personalized
assessment, including an extensive home
visit, to see what needs to be done to make
your home safe for the Alzheimer’s disease
or dementia patient. The county program was
developed in partnership with Mark Warner,
co-author of the bestselling book, “The
Complete Guide to Alzheimer’s-Proofing Your
Home.”
9. Books by other caregivers. Since
caregiving itself tends to be very
isolating, buying a caregiver a book that
describes how someone else got through it
can be very helpful. Some of the most
popular include “The 36-hour Day,” “And Thou
Shalt Honor: The Caregiver’s Companion” and
“Elder Rage,” but there are many such books
and the local library or the local
Alzheimer’s Association will allow people to
borrow them for free.
In addition to these gifts, Noe and Callahan
add that one of the best things family
members and friends can do for caregivers is
to listen, communicate and be honest.
“Often, caregivers don’t get the kind of
cooperation they need from family members or
friends, so they can end up feeling
isolated,” says Noe. “They also may lose
their friendships because they are so busy
caregiving; they often don’t get what they
need from their siblings. Caregiving is much
more difficult than it appears to be and
friends and family can help the caregiver
not to lose the sense of responsiblity that
caregivers have to themselves, to take their
of themselves and their health. They have to
do things that will help relieve the
stress.”
For more information on resources available
in Erie County, and to sign up for the
Powerful Tools for Caregivers program,
please contact the Erie County Department of
Senior Services at 716-858-2177 or email caregiver@erie.gov.
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