McCormick Care Group
McCormick Care Group
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วีดีโอ

Responding to Falls in the Home for Persons Living with Dementia
มุมมอง 1693 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.mccormickcaregroup.ca/mccormick-dementia-services-2-2/caregiverscorner/
Supporting Person Living with Dementia with Repetitive Questions
มุมมอง 1323 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.mccormickcaregroup.ca/mccormick-dementia-services-2-2/caregiverscorner/
Suggestions for Supporting a Person Living with Dementia and Shadowing
มุมมอง 1293 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.mccormickcaregroup.ca/mccormick-dementia-services-2-2/caregiverscorner/
Recreation Cueing and Activity Ideas for Activities for Persons Living with Dementia
มุมมอง 1063 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.mccormickcaregroup.ca/mccormick-dementia-services-2-2/caregiverscorner/
Care Partner Tips for Making a 911 Call and Preparing for Paramedics
มุมมอง 1213 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.mccormickcaregroup.ca/mccormick-dementia-services-2-2/caregiverscorner/
Preparing for an Activity at Home for Persons Living with Dementia
มุมมอง 1263 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.mccormickcaregroup.ca/mccormick-dementia-services-2-2/caregiverscorner/
Strategies for Incontinence, Maintaining Dignity for Persons Living with Dementia
มุมมอง 1363 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.mccormickcaregroup.ca/mccormick-dementia-services-2-2/caregiverscorner/
Supporting Sleeping and Restless Nights for Persons Living with Dementia
มุมมอง 1283 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.mccormickcaregroup.ca/mccormick-dementia-services-2-2/caregiverscorner/
McCormick Care Group's 150th Anniversary
มุมมอง 454 หลายเดือนก่อน
McCormick Care Group's 150th Anniversary
Webinar: Navigating Long Term Care. The Application and Admission Process. May 29, 2024
มุมมอง 1916 หลายเดือนก่อน
www.mccormickcaregroup.ca/mccormick-dementia-services-2-2/caregiverscorner/
Webinar: Navigating Tender Conversations: Advanced Care, End-of-Life and Grief for Caregivers
มุมมอง 947 หลายเดือนก่อน
Webinar: Navigating Tender Conversations: Advanced Care, End-of-Life and Grief for Caregivers
Webinar: Updates on Frontotemporal Dementia with Dr. Elizabeth Finger (March 2024)
มุมมอง 3687 หลายเดือนก่อน
Webinar: Updates on Frontotemporal Dementia with Dr. Elizabeth Finger (March 2024)
Salma's Story
มุมมอง 539 หลายเดือนก่อน
Salma's Story
Strategies when providing personal care for persons with dementia
มุมมอง 779 หลายเดือนก่อน
Strategies when providing personal care for persons with dementia
Judy's Story
มุมมอง 1229 หลายเดือนก่อน
Judy's Story
Strategies when a person with dementia is refusing medication
มุมมอง 2009 หลายเดือนก่อน
Strategies when a person with dementia is refusing medication
Providing redirection and validation for a person with dementia
มุมมอง 2429 หลายเดือนก่อน
Providing redirection and validation for a person with dementia
Assisting with one person transfer and transferring a person from chair to bed
มุมมอง 1859 หลายเดือนก่อน
Assisting with one person transfer and transferring a person from chair to bed
Providing mealtime assistance to a person with dementia
มุมมอง 789 หลายเดือนก่อน
Providing mealtime assistance to a person with dementia
The importance of appearance for a person with dementia
มุมมอง 839 หลายเดือนก่อน
The importance of appearance for a person with dementia
Changing an incontinence product without removing shoes and pants
มุมมอง 2809 หลายเดือนก่อน
Changing an incontinence product without removing shoes and pants
Helpful tips for bathing a person with dementia
มุมมอง 1449 หลายเดือนก่อน
Helpful tips for bathing a person with dementia
Webinar: Ambiguous Loss and Grief with Dr. Carrie Traher
มุมมอง 2359 หลายเดือนก่อน
Webinar: Ambiguous Loss and Grief with Dr. Carrie Traher
Webinar: A Typical Day in the Day Program
มุมมอง 38310 หลายเดือนก่อน
Webinar: A Typical Day in the Day Program
Webinar: Incapacity, Substitute Decision Making, and the Importance of Planning Ahead. By: Siskinds
มุมมอง 93ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: Incapacity, Substitute Decision Making, and the Importance of Planning Ahead. By: Siskinds
Webinar: Emergency Care Planning
มุมมอง 101ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: Emergency Care Planning
Updates on Alzheimer's Disease with Dr. Borrie
มุมมอง 167ปีที่แล้ว
Updates on Alzheimer's Disease with Dr. Borrie
Webinar: Navigating Long Term Care: The Application and Admission Process
มุมมอง 270ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: Navigating Long Term Care: The Application and Admission Process
Webinar: Connecting Hearing to Your Health and Well-Being
มุมมอง 99ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: Connecting Hearing to Your Health and Well-Being

ความคิดเห็น

  • @mel35621
    @mel35621 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is good info but my dilemma is she will chew them and spit them out or spit them in bottle and scratch 😓do you have any tips on that

  • @MichaelSkinner-e9j
    @MichaelSkinner-e9j ปีที่แล้ว

    when I used to take care of my mother, we Both a Pill Box And a paper. Both the pill box was labeled and the paper was labeled. And I had alarms for everything on my phone.

  • @damienmartinez1376
    @damienmartinez1376 ปีที่แล้ว

    According to this video it could be a UTI

  • @musicalmarion
    @musicalmarion ปีที่แล้ว

    So, chronic back pain with meds every 4 hours, every day, HAS to be on time. Refusing the meds continuously and the pain is starting up, crying out in pain, Dementia patient, any ideas?

  • @SuperNewKittie
    @SuperNewKittie ปีที่แล้ว

    My mom is a mean paranoid dementia patient, and when I say mean, I mean MEAN. She would mock me for handing her any food item out of the blue. She barely eats or snacks during the day and that would trigger her completely into a suspicious mode, thus making her double down on any further trickery. Today I told my dad, who is her caregiver and very exhausted by all this and gives up very easily with any resistance from her, he should threaten to leave, pick up his keys walk out the door and get in his car and drive away. She hates when he leaves her alone. I don't know if it will work, but asking a mean and paranoid dementia patient to take meds 4x a day is a recipe for a nightmarish life. I know my dad is going to give up on life soon. He can barely walk. There is no help that doesn't absolutely decimate an average person's finances, as we lived a paycheck-to-paycheck life, and even though my dad has a pension and social security and my mom received a half-million dollar inheritance a few years ago if she were to live in memory care for even a few years, it would all be gone to a horrible end of life disease. The health care system has effectively become a parasitic, profiteering, price-gouging, anti-human monstrosity that will suck every last dollar from every human being even as they take their last breath - it's probably a line item on a bill! Humanity has taken several serious wrong turns in modern times, not only in creating this epidemic but in making it impossible for us to manage. We could do so much better than this for each other, but we do have lots of money for wars and vaccine manufacturers who aren't liable for the damages their products do, and now actually create viruses so they can give us the solution which didn't even work to stop transmission or symptoms, so yay, let's all just do NOTHING about that, as well. Also, the herbicides sprayed all over our crops and food and into our atmosphere, the garbage foods out there that aren't truly 'food' that create and add to our obesity problems, the forever chemicals that are now in our water and air, the radiation and electromagnetic frequencies from not only military technologies, but from the cell phones, towers, wireless products all around us, and what are they spraying in the skies??? I have read that all of these and more are contributing to brain disease. It would seem all of the protection agencies we pay for don't protect us anymore since these big industries have arranged through lobbying and bribes to reduce safety and health protections in favor of profiting more, which means higher amounts of toxins, poisons, and radiation in our environments. We are watching our world burn. It is unsustainable. Why aren't we doing something? Why aren't we ALL out in the streets taking our world back? Because we're old, and tired and don't know how.

  • @sockowe1209
    @sockowe1209 ปีที่แล้ว

    Nope.

  • @angiethrasher2093
    @angiethrasher2093 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    What if they completely refuse anything because they believe they're being poisoned?

  • @gracesweeney8970
    @gracesweeney8970 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    beautiful story and pics--so nice for Marion