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If you are a family caregiver or a care-receiver, it is important that you understand your legal rights. Use this article to help start a discussion with your attorney or with the appropriate representative.


1. What is guardianship? Guardianship is a legal process used to insure that a person who is unable to make decisions on their own has someone specifically assigned to make decisions on their behalf.


Usually, as a last resort, a judge decides if the care-receiver is no longer capable of managing his or her life.


A person for whom a guardian is appointed is known as a ward.

2. What are the responsibilities of a guardian? The responsibilities of a guardian may include providing for the care and comfort of the ward.

In addition, the guardian must take care of the ward’s clothing, furniture and automobiles.


A guardian must secure services to help the ward return to self-care as soon as possible.

3. Who can petition the court for appointment of a guardian? A care-receiver on his/her behalf, a family member, or any person interested in the welfare of the prospective ward, can petition the court.

4. What if the care-receiver disapproves of the petition? The care-receiver should consult an attorney immediately.


The court can only appoint a guardian after clear evidence is presented at a hearing that the are-receiver is not capable of making informed decisions about his/her own care.

5. What rights does the care-receiver have when facing a potential guardianship? The care-receiver has the right to object to the guardianship, to the powers of the guardian, and to appointment of a particular person as guardian.


The care-receiver has the right to be present at the hearing, and represented by an attorney. The care-receiver has the right to present evidence on his/her own behalf.


The care-receiver has the right to cross examine all witnesses and to have a jury trial.

6. Do all guardians have the same powers? No. The court will tailor the powers of the guardian to the demonstrated need of the ward.


In some cases the court will allow the ward to control part of his/her property to encourage self-reliance.

7. Can a guardian be replaced? Yes. You or any person interested in the ward’s welfare, can petition the court to remove a guardian and appoint another.

8. How long does a guardianship last? Many times it lasts until death.


But the court must review the guardianship one year after it begins and then every three years.

9. What if the ward feels he/she no longer needs a guardian? The ward should send a letter to the judge of probate court requesting the guardianship be ended.


Or a petition can be filed by the ward or by anyone interested in his/her welfare. In either case, a hearing will be held.

10. How is a conservatorship different from a guardianship? Unlike a guardianship, a conservator cannot make healthcare decisions.


A conservator is a person or corporation appointed by probate court to manage another person’s property and financial affairs.


This differs from a guardian, who is appointed by probate court and makes decisions about the care of another person.


Take the time to talk with an attorney and communicate your intentions. Whether you are the care-receiver or the caregiver, legal planning is important.

Rebecca Colmer is an Eldercare Advocate, Author, Speaker, Publisher, and Caregiver. You can find more caregiving tools and resources at her website:
Caregiving Tools

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What you Need to Know About the Elderly and Their Fitness

Exercise and fitness are very important for elderly people, and regular exercise regimes will improve quality of living for them in a variety of ways. Fitness for the elderly is great for resolving weight problems, lowering the risk of disease, improving heart health and elevating moods. With the right routine, symptoms of disease can dissipate and a higher level of activity can be enjoyed in everyday life.

Doctors are always urging their elderly patients to begin low impact exercise routines: Preventing the body from becoming weaker, increasing strength and flexibility and improving circulation are all reasons physicians have encouraged it for years. Instead of giving up on exercise all together out of fear of injury or because of pain and discomfort, be patient and take some time to find a fitness for seniors program that suits you.

It may be that you experience much pain and jolting in your joints with aerobics, but water aerobics could be perfect for you. The weightless feeling when in the water takes all the pressure off and the resistance of the water is a soft yet effective weight. Others may prefer to use light weights on the circuit at the gym, ride a pushbike or take yoga, and all are fantastic options if they suit your requirements for a fitness routine.

When you begin to strengthen you muscles everything will become easier, and your joints will move easily and without discomfort. If weight loss is a goal in your senior fitness program, low impact light aerobic sessions will be preferred. Remembering that all these things get the circulation going, which is excellent for heart health.

Don?t worry too much about the details as all fitness for the elderly classes are designed to be safe and simple. Visit your local fitness center or gym and you could be pleasantly surprised by the well thought out options available to you: yoga, pilates, stretch, dance, step and balance are available for seniors at most gyms, and those with pools have the water varieties as well.

Fitness for the elderly classes should never involve jumping or any moves that are strenuous or complicated. In most cases the classes are similar to regular classes, but slower, gentler and less complicated. When you begin a fitness for the elderly program it will only be a matter of weeks before you notice less shortness in breath, more elevated moods and not to mention a leaner and stronger body.

For those who suffer from arthritis and joint pain, the right fitness program can really help. Water aerobics, yoga and stretch are fantastic for problems with stiffness, and there are even exercises to help with diabetes and other illnesses. Having a sensible diet and taking some good supplements should go hand in hand with your fitness for seniors plan.

It is common knowledge now days that exercise increases the production of endorphins which promote feelings of well being and alleviate depression. You will feel more alive, happier and less easily stressed out. Fitness for the elderly can completely turn depression around, so if you don?t quiet feel like it, do it anyway and feel on top of the world afterwards!

All physical benefits aside, fitness for the elderly is a great social scene. You will meet others in your age group who want to be fit and healthy, and will be likely to hook up for adventures out side of the gym as well. You can find others with similar goals to you and then work together, whether it’s to lose a few pounds or increase mobility.

Now you are feeling motivated to be stronger and live a longer and better life, begin with a quick visit to the doctor to be sure you have their okay. Armed with the physicians recommendations, you will be ready to start straight away.

Nick Hurd writes about aging and baby boomer generation and how to not only cope with the changes, but live a very healthy and active life. More informatioin is available at www.youreover50.com… Fitness for seniors copyright 2007 Nicholas Hurd all rights reserved

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Elder Care – Things We Don’t Really Bother To Talk About

Ever heard of the phrase “The 200 pound gorilla in the room”? This is a phrase referring to some topic which is at the top of everyone’s mind, but no one talks about it. Everyone knows that the gorilla is here, but no one wants to talk about this and get the gorilla upset.

Whenever you spend time with an elderly person, there is a gorilla in the room. This topic can be perfectly associated with old people, but a topic that not many dare to cross, maybe because they find it rather upsetting, or maybe they just don’t know how to say it. But this is a topic which dominates your elderly parents’ minds practically every single day. The gorilla in the room refers to death and the life-ending matters that are pending in every elderly person’s life.

As your elderly parents’ primary caregiver, you ought to be aware of how much importance this topic is to your parents. In case you have lost a parent, the spouse has greater meaning and awareness of the issue. However, there are some very good reason to avoid talking about life ending issues and impending death with your senior citizen. This is because there are plenty of final issues that must be decided upon before the time arrives. They include

> Do not give any advance document directive decisions to the end of life medical personnel.
> The conditions of the will.
> Any wishes that the elderly person may have about his or her funeral plans.
> A brief review of the insurance and financial documents that the person with the power of attorney or the Will’s executor will resolve.

In order to talk about the end of life issues which are related to death with your elderly parents, you must be emotionally stable to withstand it. Most of us bury these ominous thoughts in a trick and we just like to think that we may not go through this. Perhaps we do that because we are comfortable thinking about life itself, and have a strong feeling of discomfort while discussing afterlife and other religious ideas.

To be mentally prepared to care for your parents and be an effective counsellor to your aging parent, you must ensure that you have enough peace and resolution regarding the topic. If this means you need to confront your anxieties about religion, you must accept it as a part of being an adult because your dependants including your children as well as your aging parents may look up to you for answers related to that area. It may take some courage on your part, but it is important that you face these issues so that you can help you aging parents do the same.

If you have strong faith in religion and if your aging parents share that opinion, it is probably the right time to discuss afterlife assurances that have been dealt with in your religion. Spend time with your aging parents reading texts about the doctrine of heaven and gain comfort from it. This may bring new hope and peace to your parents because they will realize that leaving this world does not imply the end of their life.

Do not allow the 200 pound gorilla continue its stay. Discuss the issue of death and afterlife with your elderly parents, and handle it with kindness and compassion. By doing so, you will assist your parents in attaining spiritual acceptance and mental peace about the rest of their golden age and the time they have left on earth.

Abhishek successfully runs an Old Age Home and he has got some great Eldercare Secrets up his sleeves! Download his FREE 80 Pages Ebook, “How To Take Great Care Of Elders” from his website http://www.Senior-Guides.com/560/index.htm . Only limited Free Copies available.

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5 Parenting Trends That Affect How We Communicate About Childcare

In the ?old days? a mom would get advice and tips through the network of family members and friends who more likely than not were in the same town or village and within a short distance from her. With families and friends being spread across the country and the world, moms are now using the Internet to bring back aspects of that network. As moms rely on the Internet for information, they are also looking to the Internet for ways to share and manage their busy lives. Here are some of the trends I see with regards to moms using the Internet when it comes to childcare.

1. Since word-of-mouth from other moms is the greatest influencer on a mom?s purchasing decision, she is turning to Internet forums and baby-related sites such as BabyCenter and iVillage to ask questions, seek out answers, and look at product reviews.

2. Many women who wait until they are older to have children are experiencing higher instances of multiple and premature births. They tend to be more concerned when having to make the decision to leave their baby in the hands of a nanny or other caregiver. They want to know what is happening to their baby and they want to know as quickly and easily as possible.

3. Many moms are busier than ever and often don?t have time to think in between working and trying to get sleep so they seek out tools that will help them with baby care decisions. They have less time than in the past to deal with these problems and are therefore looking for quick and effective ways to get the information or advice they need to handle their unique situations.

4. Many moms are returning back to work earlier but want to continue breastfeeding and want to know how their baby is doing during the day. They are hiring baby nurses and pumping at work. This means that keeping track of how much she pumped, when her baby ate, or how much her baby ate as well as who did what and when becomes critically important in order to ensure the proper nutrition and health of her baby.

5. More and more moms are finding and hiring nannies over the Internet and nannies and nanny agencies are reaching out to moms via the Internet as well. Nannies are given access to and are using the Internet at their client?s home and are using it to do their jobs better, check their email, and communicate with their peers. Nannies and moms are also spending more and more time communicating by cell phone and email in order to schedule visits and coordinate other childcare activities.

Some changes take a long time and many seem to happen overnight. Since the beginning of humanity we have taken care of our children but the ways we take care of them has changed drastically with the introduction of diapers, formula, baby safety related items, and most recently the Internet. Who would have thought that over 36.6 million moms in the US will be regular Internet users in 2010? (source: eMarketer.com). The Internet enables her to do research so she can be a better-informed parent and a savvier consumer (51% of the moms surveyed say the Internet changed the way they get information about products and services) and allows her to network with other moms, as well.

The overall trend is clear: more and more moms are using the Internet to communicate with each other and to get the information they need to take care of their babies. Nannies and nanny agencies are participating as well and are using the Internet to reach out to moms and their employees. With families spreading out and moms finding it hard to get the one-on-one face time with baby, family, and friends, the Internet is stepping in. It is a tool that is helping make parenthood easier and bringing back some of the familial and social relationships that are so important in helping parents raise healthy children in a safe environment.

The more things change, the more they stay the same. The tools we use to aid in childcare are different now, but the goal of safety, health, and love are still the same. Are you ready to embrace the change?

The author of this article, Aruni Gunasegaram, is the President/Founder of Babble Soft, which offers web and mobile software applications that facilitate communication between caregivers by helping them to keep track of breastfeeding and bottle feedings, mom?s pumping, baby sleep patterns, diapers, immunizations and medicine doses as well as baby’s first year photo album.

The author of this article, Aruni Gunasegaram, is the President/Founder of Babble Soft, which offers web and mobile software applications that facilitate communication between caregivers by helping them to keep track of breastfeeding and bottle feedings, mom?s pumping, baby sleep patterns, diapers, immunizations and medicine doses as well as baby’s first year photo album.

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All You Need To Know About Caregivers

Many people have felt the need for a qualified caregiver at some point of time in our busy lives. Someone qualified and reliable would be an excellent solution to look after possibly a child, new mother or a patient, particularly when we are unable to take care of him or her personally. Hiring a caregiver can be beneficial in many ways.

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Copyright (c) 2008 Jennifer Selby Long

Is your career wearing you out? Are you too tired to enjoy your family and friends on the weekends, or what little part of the weekend you have? Well, I have a secret to share about the blind spot that just might have got you there. It certainly was mine. The secret is this: Your job is only part of your workload. You’re not tired because of your career. You’re tired because of everything else.

This is particularly true for women. Many of us hold ourselves up to mid-20th century ideals while working 21st century careers.

Two years ago, I was just exhausted. Between my business, the house, eldercare issues, and other responsibilities, there just wasn’t any time to relax. Something had to go, but what?

I was sick and tired of hearing from the “experts” that the solution to my exhaustion was to just stop doing most of what I was doing. I wasn’t doing anything that wasn’t important. I had eliminated all that I could, including many things I enjoy, and there was still no time for a life. That’s when I realized that I had to start hiring people to do things for me.

I think you should consider doing the same. It’s your life you’re talking about. You are in your peak years, both mentally and physically. If you’re spending your time doing something you can pay someone $15, $20, or $40 an hour to do, you’re not spending that time with your kids, partner, family, or friends, or even a good book. To me this is a waste of all your education and hard work on the job if all it gets you is no time for the rest of your life. Will you really look back on your deathbed and feel satisfied that you personally pulled all of the weeds in your yard?

It wasn’t easy. Like most entrepreneurs, I love control. I liked to pretend that I didn’t, but the truth was that I did. All of my excuses, like “I can’t afford it” really just came down to one thing: I was afraid to give up control.

For some tasks, I even had an added layer of rotten thinking: believing that if I didn’t personally handle household responsibilities like menu planning and laundry, I must be a pretty lame wife. What was I thinking? Old messages still float around our heads, and once we surface them, we have to whack them on the head until they are dead. So I did.

My first baby step was the vet who makes house calls. Why traumatize Bill with a car ride to the vet’s when there’s a vet who will come to him? Not to mention that it saved me the time getting out his carrier, driving him to the vet, waiting, and driving him home.

Then came the bookkeeper. What a fool I was to wait so long. I meet with her every other week to hand off bills and receipts. She does the rest and keeps me informed. She handles bill paying and expense and income tracking and stays on top of all the accounts for my business, for my mother-in-law, and for us.

We actually have a household P&L now. I think it’s a ton of fun. Others think it’s just sick. Either way, I have more time, and I have better focus at work, since, “Oh, crap, I wonder if I transferred enough into the personal checking account to cover that Key Bank automatic payment” never floats across my brain while I’m at work. I know that Laurie is all over it. It was heavenly to come home from almost three weeks away and have NO bills stacked up waiting for me. None.

It was the bookkeeper who suggested the gardener. She was right. Kirk hates mowing, anyway, and I was so bored pulling weeds. Now when I work in the garden, it’s the part I enjoy, like tending to my herbs and vegetables. It’s relaxing. It sort of reminds of…oh, what is it…it’s like having a life!

Finally, I took the biggest step of all: I hired a personal assistant. She handles the 1,000,000 little things like laundry, grocery shopping, making appointments with the plumber, meeting him at the house, and so on and so on. She saves me a full 40 hours a month. I was pretty shocked to realize that 10 hours out of every week had gone to managing the household, some of them during the workweek.

I get really worked up when I hear a reasonably successful professional say, “Oh, I can’t afford a luxury like that. I don’t make enough.” I couldn’t either, you could say. While it’s true that I make more money now because these wonderful people have freed up time for me to be more focused and productive, for the first few months, I carried the expenses without a return (on my business line of credit, in case you’re interested – real debt, real skin in the game, no fooling around). I was confident that the return would come, and would far exceed the investment. It has.

Even for employed professionals, the return will come if you (and your partner, if you have one) at least farm out your most hated tasks.

For the self-employed, it’s absolutely essential to manage your business from where you want it to be, not from where it is now. Investment in resources that make you successful, whether on the personal or business side, is essential to having a profitable and sustainable business.

Jennifer Selby Long, Founder and Principal of Selby Group, provides executive coaching and organizational development services. Jennifer’s knack is helping clients navigate the leadership and organizational challenges triggered by change and growth. She knows firsthand that great plans often fail because companies don’t take into account the human factors that come into play when implementing them. Visit Jennifer at: www.selbygroup.com

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