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HOME CARE
Agencies In
Los Angeles.com
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Accessible Health Care
LOS ANGELES
OFFICES:
ENCINO OFFICE
4924 Balboa Blvd #429
Encino CA 91316
PHONE: (310) 734-6990
FAX (818) 530-4300
Phone:
(310) 734-6990
CANOGA
PARK OFFICE
22048 Sherman Way #103
Canoga Park, CA 91303
PHONE: (818) 704-5910
BEVERLY HILLS OFFICE
433 N Camden Drive, Suite 600
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
PHONE: (310) 734-6990
WESTLAKE
VILLIAGE OFFICE
2625
Townsgate Road, Suite 330
Westlake Village, CA 91361
PHONE: (805) 991-5949

Hours
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24/7 Service
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About
Us:
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We
provide Excellent Home Health Care to all age groups from
newborns to seniors 24/7. Our caregivers believe
in and adopt our “Caregivers
Ten Commandments”, the cornerstone of success
for all our “Compassionate Companions”.
We
provide the most compassionate care to all individuals
- from newborns to seniors. With our dedicated and committed
professionals, our experienced team of caregivers are
supported by our diligent Support Staff making them the
best in the industry.
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Geography
We Cover:
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Santa
Clarita,
Pacific Palisades,
Sherman Oaks,
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Caring
for Aged Parents?
Beware Caregiver’s Stress
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Author: Eileen Silva
If so, you
are part of one fourth of American families who are caring for
an older family member, an adult child with disabilities, or
a friend. According to the AARP, you are one of more than 22.4
million Americans who are now caregivers to older adults, a
number that has tripled in the last 10 years alone. The average
amount of time these Americans spend on caregiving is about
20 hours per week with many of these hours spent in physically
demanding work. With the life spans raising over the past century
from 49 -77, some children are actually caring for invalid parents
20 years, longer than the parents spent raising them.
I would like to ask you a question? How is your own personal
health? One third of caregivers describe their personal health
as fair to poor, and many worry that they won’t outlive the
person for whom they are caring. As you and other caregivers
struggle to balance caregiving with other responsibilities,
including full-time jobs and caring for children, constant stress
can lead to 'burnout' and health problems. You may feel guilty,
frustrated, and angry from time to time, suffer from depression,
and become ill easily yourself. Caring for even the most beloved
parents can seem like a burden when your own health collapses
from endless hours of caring for their needs.
For example, caring for a parent with Alzheimer\'s disease (AD)
or other kinds of dementia at home can be overwhelming. The
caregiver must cope with declining abilities and difficult behaviors
that affect even basic activities of daily living and often
become hard to manage for both the care receiver and the caregiver.
As the disease worsens, the care receiver usually needs 24-hour
care.
In addition to the constant care required, caregivers of parents
with this type of problem also suffer from the emotional pain
of losing communication with parents who no longer recognize
them. To sustain this, and other types of prolonged stress and
care, you need to call upon other family members, friends, and
neighbors for help. If other caregivers aren\'t available to
fill in, respite care services may be available in the community
to help you. Respite care can be a good way for you to get a
break (respite) from constant caregiving.
Some caregivers are still raising their own children and feel
torn between the needs of their children and the needs of their
parents. In fact, in this day of small families, many Americans
may have more parents than children. They also feel torn between
their own needs for work, vacations, privacy, hobbies, or friends
and feelings of guilt, resentment, or even depression or martyrdom.
Both aging parents and caregiver children lose independence
and privacy. Even the most congenial relationships can suffer
from these loses.
Here are some recommendations to help you take care of your
own health:
• Eat a healthy diet and drink plenty of water. Avoid sugars,
fats, and salt. Include plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables.
Follow the guidelines of the government’s food pyramid for proper
amounts and food types to include in your daily menu. Take a
good multivitamin for extra protection.
• Get plenty of rest and sleep, even if you have to enlist help
to care for your parents while you rest. Spend some time unwinding
and relaxing during the day as well.
• Get regular, healthy exercise at least three days a week.
Regular exercise not only reduces stress and improves health,
but also produces endorphins, which add to a good feeling mood.
• Keep your own health care up to date, including yearly checkups.
If you experience negative feelings, get counseling from doctor
or therapist, or share your feelings with good friends.
• Speaking of friends, keep your social life active in order
to stay connected with your community and to give an outlet
for stress. Seek comfort and support in your faith-based group
as well.
• Remember you are not alone. Seek support groups for caregivers,
especially if you are caring for a loved one with a disease.
Look online for government or state supported groups and help
departments. Find community support groups.
• Make arrangements for your own vacations and retreats, for
regrouping and refreshing yourself, your spouse, and your own
children. Remember, you are not the only one affected by your
live-in parent situation. Your entire family experiences changes
and stresses along with you. Arrange for someone to stay with
your parent and spend some time as a family away from home and
those extra responsibilities.
• Remind yourself of the care that your parent lavished on you
as a child and how you felt about that parent then. Often, we
get so busy that we forget how much we really love our parents,
especially in the throes of caring for them. Try to revisit
happier days with them and remind both them and yourself of
those times. Bring out family pictures and relive happy days
together.
If you are a caregiver, remember to care for your own health
as well as that of your loved one. Seek comfort, help, time
to refresh yourself, and regular exercise to ensure that you
will remain able to give that care and still maintain your personal
wellness.
Article
Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/health-articles/caring-for-aged-parents-beware-caregivers-stress-230091.html
About
the Author
For More
Article Visit :: http://www.thearticleinsiders.com/
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