Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Care Options For Seniors After They Have Experience a Stroke


Seeing a love-one or close friend after they have suffered a stroke can prove intense. It's likely that you play a deciding role in how the elder receives care right away and further down the line. In the beginning, it may prove difficult to predict if the elder can return home or to a home-like setting. If they can, their ability to care for themselves will be in doubt. The need for assistance will be a genuine certainty. All this equates to a serious lifestyle shift. Quite often, these can lead to heightened emotions for the elder and those involved. Read on for a look at care options worth considering if some you know has become disabled due to stroke.

If a stroke victim can return to their house, home care aides provide care at an affordable cost. In fact, they typically offer less expensive care compared to other alternatives. Common roles include cleaning and doing laundry, assistance with bathing and grooming, plus they often help with medication as well as measuring vital signs. A home nurse is another possibility you may want to consider. They provide a higher level of care but at a heftier pay rate.

For a lot of people, work and family obligations can make caring for a love-one at home full-time flat-out impossible. Still, you'd like to keep them at home at least part time. If you find yourself between a rock and a hard spot like this, then you may want to consider an option like adult day care or a senior respite center. These provide care for elders recovering from a variety of setbacks, and offer personal care, therapy, and pastimes like arts and crafts. An adult day care center lets you tend to your responsibilities during the day or take a needed break from the demands of elder care. In the evening or otherwise suitable time, your loved one returns home with you. Quite possibly, an adult day care facility can deliver the ideal mix of personal care and urge to remain home.

Not everyone will have the good fortunate to receive home care after suffering a stroke. In this event, you may have to look at placing your parent or loved-one in a care facility on a permanent or part-time basis. An assisted living facility can offer a more affordable option for the senior capable of remaining semi-independent. Assistance often arrives in the form of meal preparation, cleaning, laundry, bathing, grooming, and dispensing medication. More than likely, you won't have on-site medical help at assisted living facilities. Residential care facilities offer a similar makeup, but the residents receive closer supervision and living style is more communal. Sometimes a nursing home offers the practical option if the stroke is a heavy one. Unlike an assisted-living facility, a nursing home provides skilled medical support 24/7. The care provided is more personal and more intense. Many stroke victims will experience changing conditions, for better or worse, in which case a continuing-care community may prove beneficial. Continuing-care facilities provide every type of care, from assisted living to full nursing within a single compound. This eliminates the need to move from one care facility to the next.

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