Archive for the ‘Elder Activities’ Category

CALIFORNIA STATE PLAN ON AGING 2009 - 2013

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

CALIFORNIA STATE PLAN ON AGING 2009 - 2013
The California Department of Aging has prepared the California State Plan on
Aging – 2009-2013 to promote the independence and well-being of older
adults, adults with disabilities, and their families. These individuals may have
a variety of needs related to their physical, mental and emotional well-being.
At the same time, these individuals are resilient and have much to contribute
to their communities.
By 2020, persons age 60 and older will comprise nearly 20 percent of
California’s total population. Increasingly diverse groups of older adults and
adults with disabilities – adults who are determined to age in place and
fiercely guard their independence – will require us to examine how we deliver
services.

California’s population of persons 60 and older has grown rapidly throughout
this century. Between 1950 and 2000, the number of older adults in this State
grew from 1.6 million to 4.7 million, an increase of 194 percent. This trend will
continue as the number of people age 60 and over grows to 14.6 million by
2050, an increase of 128 percent from 2010. By 2050, it is estimated that
nearly 25 percent of Californians will be 60 or older.
While approximately 628,000 Californians are 85 or older today, by 2050 an
estimated 2.9 million individuals will be in this age group, a dramatic 364
percent increase. This rapid growth has many implications for individuals,
families, communities, and government.

SOURCE: www.aging.ca.gov

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No ’senior’ label for boomers

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

You can call them boomers, or you can call them the Me Generation. You can even call them the pig in the python.

Just don’t call them seniors.

The population bulge generally defined as those born between 1946 and 1964 shun that label because it denotes feebleness, frailty and old age. And when a demographic group this large is turned off, society takes note.

“It’s great for my dad to go into restaurant and ask for the senior discount, but I just cringe. I just won’t,” said Gene Hinkle, 52, an account executive at Bailey Lauerman in Omaha who recently worked with Immanuel Health Systems to rename its seven retirement communities Immanuel Communities instead of Immanuel Senior Living.

“We want to stay active and young,” Hinkle said, “and we’re fighting aging every step of the way.”

It’s just one more example of how marketers and advertisers have catered to baby boomers for the past 40 years - whatever they want, they get, regardless of how self-indulgent or silly.

Civic Ventures of San Francisco, a nonprofit think tank focused on “encore careers,” recently posted an article on its website, Encore.org, suggesting that activity centers for senior citizens be named “boomer centers” or “boomer cafes” to better appeal to the some 8,000 people turning 60 every day.

The posting attracted several responses, including one reading: “Bingo, Hawaiian Days, and travelogues belong to a different generation. My preference would be for adding resources, and multi-generational activities based on community needs and interest. For example, providing job search, business incubators, and skills workshops to name a few. Also, how about providing high quality coffees, and good danish selections?”

Will senior centers become “boomer cafes”? Senior living facilities “encore communities”? Senior discounts “special pricing for mature customers”? Obviously, there’s a real danger of taking this too far.

Tom Jensen, executive director of Council Bluffs Senior Center Inc., said the organization named its $4.5 million, state-of-the-art facility the Center — short, simple and straightforward — because 55 percent of its 2,000 members are age 50 to 64.

So when the building opened in 2002, “senior center” wasn’t an exact fit, he said. And some people are resistant to joining an organization with that name, Jensen said.

“To us, the term ‘senior’ has status, there’s nothing wrong with it,” he said, “but I understand why people would want to move away from it.”

Stefanie Weiss, vice president of communications for Civic Ventures, said there are few good words to describe aging or people of a certain age, generally those born during the post-World War II “baby boom” when returning military veterans began raising families.

Still, said the 51-year-old Weiss, “few people are OK with the word ‘senior.’”

The problem is that people, especially baby boomers, don’t see themselves as the age they are, she said. And when, after all, does the “senior” phase begin?

The term might have worked better for the previous generation, Weiss said, when life and career followed a more predictable course: You worked at the same company for 35 or 40 years, retired at 65 and got the gold watch, and became a senior citizen.

But when life expectancy jumps from 47 at the beginning of the 20th century to 77 at the end of it, Weiss said, when does old age start?

Baby boomers’ rejection of the term “senior” perhaps isn’t based solely on the constant youthful image they have of themselves.

Anthropologist Mary Catherine Bateson, a visiting scholar at Boston College’s Center on Aging and Work, has said that increased longevity added years to the middle of life, not to the end. If that’s true, it really confuses what it means to be older, Weiss said.

“There’s no language for this new phase of life. Everyone is casting around for the right word. My feeling is we don’t have a term because we don’t have any one thing that would work. … It’s a way too diverse population to describe in one word.”

Weiss said she couldn’t pinpoint how or when the term “senior” emerged as a synonym for old person. “It’s hard to know where these terms come from and how they stick.”

The Senior Times, an online newspaper published in Quebec, Canada, says the term “senior citizen” appears to have been coined “as a euphemism for ‘old person’ during a 1938 American political campaign.”

Eventually, the Senior Times said, the term was shortened by some to “senior,” a term also used to refer to members of a graduating class in high school or college.

Eric Gurley, CEO of Immanuel, said the name Immanuel Communities suggests a collection of individuals, while “‘senior’ harks of institution.”

Hinkle said Immanuel Senior Living had the focus and programming living well, exercising, keeping active to appeal to its future customers, the baby boomers, so dropping the words “Senior Living” was an easy fix.

The marketing campaign’s tagline for Immanuel Communities “Uniquely your own” also should appeal to younger people, he said.

“It means being part of something larger but staying unique,” Hinkle said. “Boomers don’t want to be assimilated.”

Interaction with retirement community residents has taught Gurley that people have a chronological age and an age that they see themselves, and they do their best to live that lifestyle.

Gurley, who describes himself as about 24 internally and almost 48 chronologically, is a boomer, but barely. “I’m at the tail end,” he said, “I’ll be here to serve the ones preceding me.”

The folks in question also don’t like to be generalized, he said, but that hasn’t prevented them from accepting and even embracing “baby boomer,” which has defined them for most of their lives. So they can’t use the old “I’m unique and defy generalization” excuse as a reason for their rejection of the term “senior.”

Maybe baby boomers are just more vocal and honest in rejecting a term that has outlived its usefulness. Gurley said his father-in-law is 90 but doesn’t see himself as a senior.

“He defines others as seniors.”

SOURCE:  omaha.com

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May Day Activities for Seniors

Friday, April 30th, 2010

May Day Activities for Seniors
Why not make a crown of daisies and celebrate May Day?
The tradition of May Day Baskets is a fun way to let your friends and loved ones know that you think of them. So get ready to craft a special basket. Fill it with a bunch of summer flowers and leave it on a friend’s front door knob. The door bell is rung, and you run and hide so they won’t know who has left the greeting.
Source: theholidayspot.com,

Click here for more ideas for May Day Activities

Chose a May Queen or King and crown them with fresh spring flowers.
May Day Around the World:
Some countries still celebrate May Day. In France, May Day is a flower festival. Delicate white flowers called lilies of the valley are believed to bring good luck. In Denmark, sweethearts give each other bouquets of lilies of the valley. Holland celebrates May 1 with a tulip festival. On May 1 in Greece, the schools are closed. The students trek into the woods to gather flowers. In some other countries, May is a day of parades.

SOURCE: www.first-school.ws

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Elder Care in Our Country Today

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Dr. Bill Thomas, founder of the Eden Alternative and Green House, discusses the future of aging

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Dying Easter Eggs for Elders and Kids

Saturday, April 3rd, 2010

Add a surprise to your Elder’s life this Easter!
If you have Kids get them involved.  What a fun project for both the your and the young at heart!

Easter Egg for Kids and Elders

Easter Egg for Kids and Elders

How to make a Hard Boiled Egg
* Lay eggs on bottom of the pot
* Try not to stack your eggs (it’s better to do it in batches than overfill your pot)
* Fill with water so it’s an inch over the eggs
* Put on high heat and bring to a rapid boil
* Let boil for 12 minutes
* Remove from heat
* Remove the eggs immediately from the pot (I use a slotted spoon) and plunge them into cold water until you can pick them out of the water without burning your hands (a bit under a minute)

Crayon Easter Eggs
This project combines a child’s artistic skills with regular Easter egg dying techniques. You can use store bought dye or the home made variety.
Materials:
* hard boiled egg(s)
* wax crayons (the waxier the better… in this case cheap crayons are better than crayolas)
* Easter Egg dye: store bought dye or home made
Directions:
* Draw pictures or designs with wax crayon. Even white wax crayon will be useful for this project.
* Dip in dye.
* Let dry.
* The dye won’t soak through the crayon! I find cheap crayons work best for this project (crayolas don’t have quite enough wax in them though they do work ok).
* An adult may need to help hold the egg while the child draws their pictures on it… at least the first time until they get the hang of it.

Source: dltk-holidays.com

Click her to read this article on Easter Egg Projects

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St. Patrick’s Day Scavenger Hunt

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

St. Patrick’s Day Scavenger Hunt

This St Patrick’s Day Activity can be for Elders or Children…make it a fun day for all!

Follow fun all the way to a faux pot of gold.

What You Need
  • Paper
  • Marker
  • Black pot
  • Chocolate gold coins
  • Scissors
  • Green construction paper
Instructions
  1. Hide a pot filled with gold chocolate coins either inside or out, depending on the weather.
  2. Cut out several four leaf clovers from green construction paper. Cut one clover larger than the others.
  3. Write clues leading up to the pot on the smaller clovers.
  4. On the large clover, write the first clue and place it under your child’s breakfast dish.

SOURCE:  familyfun.go.com

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Valentine’s Activities for Elders

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Guess how much Love is in the Jar
Put lots of candy hearts in a glass jar and as the Elders to guess number of candies in the jar. Person who makes the closest guest gets to take the candies. This activity will help you to connect with each Elder.

Elders on Valentines Day

Edlers on Valentines Day

Heart Hunt
This activity can be planned for Elders and kids. All you need to do is hide a number of paper hearts around easy to find places. Ask the Elders to gather as many hearts as they can.

Flower Walk or Drive

Instead of sending flowers, take your elder to a  flower show or local garden or flower fields. You might  drive or wander through the Spring Flowers area and take in the colors and scents of the gorgeous flowers and plants.

The Gift of Time

Perhaps the best gift you can give any Elder is just the gift of time.   Sit and have a cup of tea and talk.  Just visit. That’s all they need.

Inexpensive Valentine Props

Stock up on stuff from the Dollar Store.  Fill the House with hearts and Valentine items.  Have candy bowl  for staff and visitors in a room designated as the Valentine Room.  Everyone coming into the room gets a treat.
Valentine Memories
Elders will enjoy remembering sweetheart things from their earlier days.  First Date and First Kiss stories can get the memory ball rolling.

Pet Visits
Have a dog to visit with a  red bow and or  some hearts on their collar.

Valentine PJ Party
Look  for Heart PJ’s for Men an Women.  Have a PJ Party with hats and  cloth hearts that can be attached to PJ’s.

Serve Valentine shaped snacks.  Heart shaped Pancakes, waffles sandwiches, cookies.

Put a Valentine surprise under the Elder’s pillow.  Everyone loves a surprise, and Elders get very few surprises!

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Wii video games have seniors up and moving

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

Irene G. Methe of Belchertown bowls every Monday. But she doesn’t have to don soft-soled shoes or make a trip to the local bowling alley.

Senior Woman Wii bowling

Senior Woman Wii bowling


Instead, Methe, 78, heads over to the Belchertown Senior Center where she and a few other seniors compete in a “virtual” bowling competition using Wii Sports, a video game system produced by Nintendo in which players use a remote control device to mimic actions performed in real-life sports. In addition to bowling, Wii users also can play simulated golf, tennis, baseball and boxing.

Wii Sports, Wii Play and Wii Fit programs have swept the nation, with Nintendo reporting that by March 2009, some 50 million units have been sold worldwide, making Wii the most popular video game system in the world.

The Wii craze has taken hold in retirement communities and senior citizen centers across the country, and locally, many facilities are beginning to offer Wii programs.

At the Belchertown Senior Center, for example, people have been playing Wii bowling, golf and tennis for the past couple of months and there’s a weekly Wii bowling league. The Easthampton Senior Center has a program they call “Say Oui to Wii,” and seniors have formed a Wii bowling league. The Hadley Council on Aging recently held an orientation program for seniors to learn how to use a new Wii system, while at the Lathrop Retirement Community in Easthampton, seniors also are playing Wii golf and bowling. The Northampton Senior Center is trying to raise money to buy a Wii system. A new Wii console, that includes Wii Sports games, costs about $250.

“I’d never done Wii bowling before we got it set up at the senior center,” Methe said. “We are having such a ball with it. I like it a lot. It makes you move and gets you some exercise and it’s fun to be able to get up and participate with different people at all different skill levels. We are all learning together.”

Methe, the mother of six children, bowled as a young woman in a mother’s bowling league, but hasn’t played the sport in many years. She said the Wii program is very similar to real bowling.

“The whole thing keeps score and does everything for you,” she said. “All you have to do is aim the remote straight and release it.” Methe said she would like to bowl at an actual bowling alley, but said it would be difficult to find transportation and people to play with. “This is all right here at the senior center for us,” she said. “We don’t have to go anywhere.”

Methe said the Wii system allows many people at the center with physical limitations to bowl. Methe is the center’s top bowler, with a score of 181, the highest score bowled so far. “That’s better than I did in my normal bowling,” she said. “And there were witnesses!”

Local health experts say any form of exercise is good for seniors, including Wii.

“Exercise is extremely important for elderly folks and there is so much new information now on how beneficial it is,” said Dr. H. Jon Schiller, a family practitioner with Valley Medical Center in Amherst. “If Wii fosters participation in exercise, then I am all for it,” he said.

At the VA Medical Center, Wii is used in all the in-patient units for recreation as well as for physical therapy, says Sandra Diamond, the center’s rehabilitation supervisor. Diamond says she particularly likes the features that track participants’ fitness levels, body-mass index, balance reactions, and other areas, and appreciates the ability to modify the games to accommodate different abilities, including for people who must be seated. Ankle and leg weights can be used for added difficulty, she noted. The Wii is especially popular among young veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, she said, but also is used by older veterans.

“Wii is such a great distraction,” she said. “Everyone likes to stare at TV and now you can combine that with some fun exercise.”

For many seniors, like Methe, the Wii games provide an opportunity to participate in sports in the “virtual” world that they once enjoyed in their everyday lives. Some of these seniors do not have the mobility to get out to a golf course or bowling alley any longer. Inclement winter weather keeps those who are mobile stuck indoors.

“Wii is something you can do inside and it’s easily accessible if you are not as physically able as you were once were,” said Kim Jensen, activity coordinator at the Easthampton Council on Aging and Senior Center. The center just launched a weekly Wii bowling league and plans to offer golf and other Wii games in the future.

For example, Jensen said, bowling is inaccessible to many elderly people because the balls weigh between 5 and 15 pounds or so. In Wii bowling, the player “bowls” with a remote device that “weighs no more than a tissue box.” The game can even be played while seated by those who have trouble standing for long periods or who are confined to wheelchairs.

“If you are sitting in a chair, you can still swing your arm and you don’t even need to have a full range of the arm to play,” Jensen said.

The center offers private one-on-one training sessions for seniors who may find the technology of Wii unfamiliar and intimidating, Jensen added. Once they get the basics, players can join their friends for the weekly Wii bowling league.

“Some people need time to get used to the idea of playing a Wii game,” Jensen said. “They may have seen their grandchildren or great-grandchildren play with Wii and they think of it as just a video game. I tell them it’s a lot more than that. It’s a whole-body game that will get them up and moving.”

Health benefits

Schiller, of Valley Medical Center, said regular exercise, like that provided by the Wii Sports games, can improve balance, stability and coordination for senior citizens and help them retain muscle strength.

“Research shows that seniors who exercise regularly have a 30 percent decrease in falls and a 20 to 40 percent decrease in hip fractures,” he said. Exercise also lowers blood pressure and benefits the heart, increases endurance and prevents osteoporosis and bone loss - all of which are significant concerns for elderly people. Schiller noted the latest research also indicates that exercise can have a beneficial effect on lifting depression, which many senior citizens grapple with, particularly those who are more isolated.

“Sweat is the new antidepressant,” Schiller said. “Exercise improves sleep, reduces anxiety and depression and helps us cope with stress. The news that is exciting us lately is that exercise actually increases the ability of the brain to function and some studies show that new brain cells are formed with regular exercise. … It’s like Miracle Grow for the brain. Exercise improves the functioning of the frontal lobe and literally can help stave off Alzheimer’s disease.”

While Bill Korzenowski, director of the Belchertown Senior Center, says it is too soon to know whether the Wii games are improving the health of seniors there, he said it is clear that people are having fun.

“The people who are using it really enjoy it,” Korzenowski said.

That enjoyment may be part of the key to Wii’s success, says Dr. Beth Warner, an osteopath and hospitalist at Cooley Dickinson Hospital in Northampton.

“It’s always good for exercise programs to be fun and I could see that being a motivating factor for people to use Wii,” Warner said. For elderly people with “reasonable” balance, she says, Wii Sports games are a good option for exercise. “Most efforts at exercise programs among older adults should incorporate a blend of strength training, endurance and balance,” she said, adding that regular exercise helps senior citizens maintain independence and prevents falls. Once an elderly person falls, she said, they often become anxious about the next fall and may be afraid to go out. Frequently, they become increasingly housebound and immobile, relying on caregivers.

Warner cautioned that elderly people with balance issues should see a physical therapist before participating in Wii Fit, which uses a balance board; players must be able to safely step on and off the board. A simple exam by a physician to screen for joint pains, high blood pressure, cardiovascular problems, or dizziness should suffice for most elderly patients in good health, she says.

Senior center directors stress that their facilities still offer traditional exercise classes such as yoga, Tai Chi, and osteoporosis prevention, and the Wii is not meant to replace those activities.

Wii has been especially appealing to people who once bowled or golfed or played tennis, but cannot any longer. In most cases, the games are projected on a large screen television, which makes it easier for seniors to see and participate in the action.

“It’s accessible on so many different levels,” Jensen, of the Easthampton Senior Center, said. “People say, ¿Oh those days are over for me,’ and I say, ¿no they are not.’ ”

Once people see others playing, they often become curious and want to join in on the fun. “It’s exciting for people to say, ¿Hey, I can still get up and bowl, no matter what age or physical condition I am in,’ ” Jensen said. “Wii encourages the body to have some body memory and do what they used to do, but on a smaller scale.”

Fun and games

Whether or not they are drawn to the exercise aspect, many senior citizens are getting hooked on Wii.

“I would say that part of it is just the fun and games of it,” said John Clobridge, activities coordinator at Lathrop. “It’s more of a social event. People like playing Wii with other people. Kids like to sit alone and play video games ad infinitum, but it’s not like that with seniors. They enjoy seeing other people do it. It’s even become a spectator sport here.” Several seniors have been golfing on the Wii system at Lathrop and the retirement community is planning a Wii golf tournament this spring.

Ann Hess, 71, who plays on the Wii bowling league at the Belchertown Senior Center, said, “It’s definitely a lot of fun. … It seems like it’s real bowling and you can get a little bit of exercise with it. I think people have found it easy to use. I’d recommend it for seniors everywhere.”

Jensen said it’s been a pleasure to see some previously inactive seniors participate in the Wii bowling.

“For older people who have closed the box on physical activity, the Wii helps open that box back up and takes the lid off,” Jensen said. “When we do the Wii bowling, people are cheering each other on. Someone makes a gutter ball and everyone laughs and they try again and finally get a few pins down. It’s wonderful watching their faces light up.”

Sandra Dias is a freelance writer based in Holyoke.
SOURCE: gazettenet.com

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