For those who work outside the home, finding the right elder care for our elderly loved ones can take a toll on our jobs and that can lead to stress for everyone. More and more time off of work is used to search for the care, alternative housing and services our elderly need.
According to CBS Evening News, companies lose revenues in the billions due to employees taking time off to care for their elderly loved ones. That effects everyone - from the CEO to the shareholders.
The Golden Journey works around our clients' schedules so their time off of work is for their needs and enjoyment - not to work another job in caregiving.
From CBS News Evening News and CBS News.com: February 21, 2007
(CBS) When Linda Blossom leaves her office at Freddie Mac, the mortgage giant, another job begins. She takes care of her 74-year old mother, who has been battling breast cancer for years, CBS News correspondent Kelly Wallace reports. "She acted a little stressed for a while and then all of a sudden, I didn't see the stress anymore," says her mother, Gladys Tulloch. What changed? Blossom started attending monthly support group meetings at her office, where, on company time, she and other workers can vent and share tips about caring for mom and dad. Blossom says it's made a "huge, huge" difference. "I've told people, it's all about people helping people," she says. Mary Ann O'Connor, director of benefits for Freddie Mac, says it also protects the company's bottom line.
Links:
MetLife Mature Market Institute
MetLife Mature Market Institute Studies Page
"By offering something like this, it definitely helps Freddie Mac because they're coming to work and they're being productive and they can focus on the job at hand," O'Connor says. That's important, because companies lose a staggering $33 billion a year when employees miss work or quit to care for their loved ones. As the workforce ages and people live longer, those numbers are only going to go up. Johnny Taylor, who tracks workplace trends, says corporations that once were pressured to provide better child care are now going to have to provide better elder care.
"Employees will begin to demand it because it will be such a strain on them personally and financially to provide for their elder parents and their grandparents and the like and they'll call for it," Taylor says. "It'll become a part of the new benefits package."
Corporate America has a long way to go. According to a survey conducted by Taylor's group, Society for Human Resources Management, for CBS News, only about one in four companies offers any elder care benefits. McGraw-Hill allows workers to add mom or dad to their health plan. Prudential Financial offers legal help to prepare living wills for elderly parents. Blossom's company, Freddie Mac, provides emergency elder home care for which employees pay just $15 a day. What businesses get in return, according to Blossom, is not only greater productivity, but loyalty.
"If they didn't understand it here, I wouldn't be here," she says. For this mother and daughter, that understanding means everything. "It's been a real blessing," Tulloch says. "I'm really very blessed."
Friday, March 23, 2007
Lonliness May be linked to Alzheimer's
Loneliness May Up Alzheimer's Risk
Study Shows Lonely People Twice as Likely to Be Diagnosed With the Disease
By Kathleen DohenyWebMD Medical News
Reviewed By Louise Chang, MDon Monday, February 05, 2007
More From WebMD
Sudoku Brain Booster Game
Frequent Alzheimer's Questions Answered
New Experiment for Alzheimer's Disease
Lonely individuals are twice as likely to be diagnosed with Alzheimer's diseaseAlzheimer's disease as those who are not lonely, according to a new study.
Researchers focused on the effects of emotional isolation, or loneliness, in which people perceive themselves as feeling socially isolated and disconnected from others -- sometimes even if they're surrounded by family and friends.
"It turns out people who have this feeling of being socially isolated are at higher risk of developing Alzheimer's," says David A. Bennett, MD, co-author of the study and director of the Rush University Medical Center Alzheimer's Disease Center in Chicago.
Though a small social network of friends and family has been linked in previous research to a higher risk of Alzheimer's, Bennett's group focused on a person's perception of being alone, regardless of their social network size.
"We are talking about a tendency to feel isolated and alone in the world," he says. "You can have a small network and not feel isolated; or you can have a large network but don't know how to connect, and feel isolated." The Study Bennett and his colleagues recruited 823 people (average age: nearly 81) in and near Chicago. All were free of dementia at the start of the study.
Participants had agreed to donate their brains at death to the Rush Memory and Aging Project.
The researchers assessed loneliness using a five-item questionnaire in which participants agreed or disagreed with statements that they didn't have enough friends, often felt abandoned, or experienced a sense of emptiness. They repeated the test annually.
A score of 5 indicated the most loneliness. At the start, the participants' average score was 2.3.
76 Developed Alzheimer's. During the follow-up of nearly four years, 76 participants developed Alzheimer's. When the researchers looked at the scores of those with Alzheimer's, they found risk of the disease was more than double for those who had loneliness scores of 3.2 (landing them in the bottom 90th percentile) compared with those who were not lonely and had an average score of 1.4 (in the top 10th percentile).
The link between loneliness and Alzheimer's was there, Bennett says, even when they adjusted for small social network and infrequent socializing, both known risk factors.
However, when they autopsied the brains of 90 people who died during the study, they didn't find a link between high loneliness scores and the physical brain changes that point to the disease. Though loneliness increased the chances of getting a clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's, it didn't seem to increase the physical brain changes tied to the disease and seen at autopsy.
More research is needed to figure out exactly how loneliness boosts the risk of Alzheimer's, Bennett says.
"The loneliness is doing something to the brain," he says. It may be that it lowers your brain reserve, setting you up for memory problems.
Study Shows Lonely People Twice as Likely to Be Diagnosed With the Disease
By Kathleen DohenyWebMD Medical News
Reviewed By Louise Chang, MDon Monday, February 05, 2007
More From WebMD
Sudoku Brain Booster Game
Frequent Alzheimer's Questions Answered
New Experiment for Alzheimer's Disease
Lonely individuals are twice as likely to be diagnosed with Alzheimer's diseaseAlzheimer's disease as those who are not lonely, according to a new study.
Researchers focused on the effects of emotional isolation, or loneliness, in which people perceive themselves as feeling socially isolated and disconnected from others -- sometimes even if they're surrounded by family and friends.
"It turns out people who have this feeling of being socially isolated are at higher risk of developing Alzheimer's," says David A. Bennett, MD, co-author of the study and director of the Rush University Medical Center Alzheimer's Disease Center in Chicago.
Though a small social network of friends and family has been linked in previous research to a higher risk of Alzheimer's, Bennett's group focused on a person's perception of being alone, regardless of their social network size.
"We are talking about a tendency to feel isolated and alone in the world," he says. "You can have a small network and not feel isolated; or you can have a large network but don't know how to connect, and feel isolated." The Study Bennett and his colleagues recruited 823 people (average age: nearly 81) in and near Chicago. All were free of dementia at the start of the study.
Participants had agreed to donate their brains at death to the Rush Memory and Aging Project.
The researchers assessed loneliness using a five-item questionnaire in which participants agreed or disagreed with statements that they didn't have enough friends, often felt abandoned, or experienced a sense of emptiness. They repeated the test annually.
A score of 5 indicated the most loneliness. At the start, the participants' average score was 2.3.
76 Developed Alzheimer's. During the follow-up of nearly four years, 76 participants developed Alzheimer's. When the researchers looked at the scores of those with Alzheimer's, they found risk of the disease was more than double for those who had loneliness scores of 3.2 (landing them in the bottom 90th percentile) compared with those who were not lonely and had an average score of 1.4 (in the top 10th percentile).
The link between loneliness and Alzheimer's was there, Bennett says, even when they adjusted for small social network and infrequent socializing, both known risk factors.
However, when they autopsied the brains of 90 people who died during the study, they didn't find a link between high loneliness scores and the physical brain changes that point to the disease. Though loneliness increased the chances of getting a clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's, it didn't seem to increase the physical brain changes tied to the disease and seen at autopsy.
More research is needed to figure out exactly how loneliness boosts the risk of Alzheimer's, Bennett says.
"The loneliness is doing something to the brain," he says. It may be that it lowers your brain reserve, setting you up for memory problems.
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