Answers For Elders Radio Network

Answers For Elders Radio Network

Answers for Elders is the North Star in Navigating Senior Care.  Our content is designed to Empower Seniors and their Families through the Daunting Journey of Aging. Featuring our host, Suzanne Newman and top industry providers across the USA, together, we support, coach and assist seniors, caregivers and their families in finding the best independent solutions in world of aging, with a comprehensive line-up of topics covering Health & Wellness, Life Changes, Living Options, and Money & Law.

  1. 17시간 전

    Alzheimer's: Many Ways to Volunteer and Help

    Volunteer groups advocate to make a difference in the lives of people facing Alzheimer's and dementia. Jim Wilgus, Executive Director for the Washington State Chapter of the Alzheimer's Association, joins Suzanne Newman on the Answers for Elders Radio Show to talk about various ways you can help the search for a cure. Jim says, "There's a lot of ways for folks to engage with the Alzheimer's Association, whether you're in need of services yourself, or you want to volunteer for a clinical trial, or you want to volunteer for an event, or be a community educate educator in your home community. We're present with Walk events in 600 communities across the United States and over almost 30 in my territory. "There's all kinds of ways for people to get involved. Certainly if you're in need of services, that's a place to start your journey, to access services at the local level or at a 24/7, 365 day year level. Contact our helpline at 1 800 272-3900. We have master's level social workers that work at that helpline to provide care and support services and advice to individuals, but also they're available with our central information around what's happening locally that you can get involved with. "Another great place to go is our website www.alz.org, and you can access a myriad of resources there, but also find your local chapter. Getting involved as a volunteer, or seeking our services, is a good first step to begin your journey of supporting the Alzheimer's Association or gaining services from the Alzheimer's Association. "A one time opportunity could be to participate in your state's Advocacy Day, which actually has individuals from all parts of the state. We held ours last week in Olympia here in Washington. We had over 100 individuals at the state capitol in Olympia who visited with every legislator on a scheduled appointment to talk about the agenda that we were promoting to support Alzheimer's disease and other dementias. We were in Juneau last week in Alaska. If you're in Des Moines, if you're in Santa Fe, if you're in Annapolis, there's a state advocacy day for every single state. It's just as easy as finding the information on our website and learning about when those dates are, and how you can register." Visit https://www.alz.org/trialmatch to find clinical trials in your area. Alzheimer's Association websiteAbout Alzheimer's and DementiaCall their helpline at 800.272.3900Hear more podcasts about the Alzheimer's AssociationHear more podcasts about the Walk to End Alzheimers Check out our affiliate podcast Alzheimer’s Speaks

    9분
  2. 17시간 전

    Alzheimer's: Clinical Trial Participants Urgently Needed

    Jim Wilgus, Executive Director for the Washington State Chapter of the Alzheimer's Association, joins Suzanne Newman on the Answers for Elders Radio Show to talk about the need for participants in Alzheimer's clinical trials. Jim says, "There are circumstances, certainly, where Alzheimer's disease is prevalent within family units, but there's also incidents where it's not. And that's what makes Alzheimer's disease such a mystery, and why research and clinical trials are so important. There's also known evidence that Alzheimer's disease and other dementia are more prevalent in certain populations, particularly African Americans and Hispanic Americans. "There are needs for all kinds of individuals. And certainly some trials don't require a diagnosis, some trials do. But the bottom line is we need participants in trials. They're safe, they're ethically sound and founded. Many of them are at universities and hospitals, and new treatments for Alzheimer's disease and other dementia are nearly impossible without clinical trials. Many more participants are needed, including people, as I mentioned, with dementia or those who are at risk of developing it. Also, for caregivers, or healthy volunteers, with no dementia issues. All are urgently needed for the hundreds and hundreds of trials that take place throughout the United States." Visit https://www.alz.org/trialmatch to find clinical trials in your area. Alzheimer's Association websiteAbout Alzheimer's and DementiaCall their helpline at 800.272.3900Hear more podcasts about the Alzheimer's AssociationHear more podcasts about the Walk to End Alzheimers Check out our affiliate podcast Alzheimer’s Speaks

    7분
  3. 18시간 전

    Alzheimer's: Participate in Clinical Trials

    If you have a loved one who was just diagnosed — or if you've been diagnosed yourself, maybe you are taking care of someone — with Alzheimer's and dementia, the Alzheimer's Association is an amazing resource. Jim Wilgus, Executive Director for the Washington State Chapter of the Alzheimer's Association, joins Suzanne Newman on the Answers for Elders Radio Show to talk about clinical research, and opportunities to participate in clinical trials to cure Alzheimer's. Jim says, "Today, many trials are done online or over the phone. Sometimes they may just require one initial visit. So there's a lot of opportunities for engagement and opportunities for people of any walk of life. We need anyone that wants to be in a trial to get engaged. Inquire about trials that are available in your area, if you're disposed to, because some trials accept individuals who are in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease or other dementia. Sometimes even in the middle stages. And sometimes trials have opportunities for the caregiver to participate as well. So it's a very important part of finding a cure to the disease." Visit https://www.alz.org/trialmatch to find clinical trials in your area. Alzheimer's Association websiteAbout Alzheimer's and DementiaCall their helpline at 800.272.3900Hear more podcasts about the Alzheimer's AssociationHear more podcasts about the Walk to End Alzheimers Check out our affiliate podcast Alzheimer’s Speaks

    10분
  4. 18시간 전

    Alzheimer's: Urgency to Find a Cure

    Jim Wilgus, Executive Director for the Washington State Chapter of the Alzheimer's Association, joins Suzanne Newman on the Answers for Elders Radio Show. Suzanne and Jim talk about the Alzheimer's Association accelerating clinical research into cures for Alzheimer's and Dementia, funding about $430 million for 1,100 projects in 56 countries. The Alzheimer's Association has a division of medical science leadership and officers, plus hundreds of volunteers and researchers. Jim says, "The United States is funding at an exponentially higher level, significantly of nearly $4 billion at the federal level compared to when I started in 2010. It was at just about 40 or 50 million. And so now the research funding is rivaling that of cancer and heart and HIV AIDS and the urgency of getting that funding advanced from 2013 14 or so to where it is today means largely through the efforts of the Alzheimer's Association and our thousands of advocates that are that go to D.C. and that work at their districts and home as volunteers in all 50 states." "One in nine over 65, and one in three over 85, [are at risk for Alzheimer's]. And when I started in 2010, one of the things that we did as an association was participated with a corporation to have a float in the Rose Bowl Parade, which is on January 1st every year. And it was 2011, which was the very first day that Baby Boomers turned 65. And it was to bring attention to the fact that this generation, over an 18-year span, is going to be turning 65 at 10,000 people a day." Visit https://www.alz.org/trialmatch to find clinical trials in your area. Alzheimer's Association websiteAbout Alzheimer's and DementiaCall their helpline at 800.272.3900Hear more podcasts about the Alzheimer's AssociationHear more podcasts about the Walk to End Alzheimers Check out our affiliate podcast Alzheimer’s Speaks

    12분
  5. 3일 전

    Recipe for Disaster: Downloading Legal Documents

    The value an estate planning attorney brings you, vs. just downloading documents yourself online, is a discussion Andrea Lee frequently addresses. They are who will advocate for you. If you're a senior, an estate planning attorney or an elder law attorney is worth their weight in gold. Andrea Lee from Legacy Estate Planning joins Suzanne Newman on the Answers for Elders podcast to talk about the benefits of hiring an elder law attorney. Andrea says, “Number one, it's extremely important when you're preparing estate planning documents to ensure they're exactly properly done. The laws are constantly changing, and unfortunately, if someone downloads a form and it's not in tune with the existing laws, it's not going to achieve their goals... If an individual signs, say, a power of attorney document and then it's not enforceable or doesn't give the right powers, it doesn't give the right date of being effective — if there are problems with it, then the individual who signed that usually has become incapacitated when somebody else is trying to use that document. There's no cure for that." "Downloading documents and simply filling them out is really a recipe for disaster, because if they are not properly done, if they don't go right, there isn't a way to fix it after the fact... I have had clients who I represented years ago, or the children of clients I represented in drafted documents for many years ago and call me up and say, mom and dad moved twice since they met with you and now mom's in a facility and we can't find original documents, but we need an original to sell the house. There are laws that state, if I'm the attorney who drafted the document... I can make it happen that a copy is accepted as much as an original. Whereas if you've downloaded a form and you've signed it yourself, there isn't any way legally that I know of where we can get copies accepted, if nobody has a copy of that and can't attest to the fact that this copy is identical to someone's original document.” "I meet with my clients and I always say to them, it's my job to think of the worst things that can happen and then to mitigate it. What if this happens? You know, what if, unfortunately, your entire family is wiped out in an earthquake, just these crazy things that can happen, and then how can we prepare a plan that would still work? Yeah. What if there was an earthquake and the house came tumbling down — we've seen tragedies as recently as the fires in Southern California, where people have lost homes, they've lost everything. And those things happen. And that's actually another compelling reason to retain an attorney to draft documents.” “I think it's everybody's hope that their agent, who they select and name the documents, advocate properly for the principle. So right when I sign that health care power of attorney, when I sign that power of attorney, that financial power of attorney, whatever documents that I execute, the hope is always at the agent I've named properly advocate for me. But the reality is so many agents lack the education, they lack the experience, they lack the knowledge to truly be a fantastic advocate for their loved ones...” Learn more: About Andrea LeeLegacy Estate Planning websiteLegacy Estate Planning podcasts Check out our affiliate podcast Alzheimer’s Speaks.

    15분
  6. 3일 전

    Executor and Power of Attorney: Differences

    Elder law attorney Andrea Lee from Legacy Estate Planning joins Suzanne Newman on the Answers for Elders podcast to clarify the steps an executor of the family estate has to take after a senior loved one passes. “When someone steps into that role of power of attorney, loving daughter or son or good friend, whomever that is, there are so many different hats that they wear when they act as an advocate for their loved one. Many people misunderstand the steps that have to be taken care of after someone passes away. And there's there's a little bit of confusion about, hey, I was a power of attorney, but mom died. What happens now? What are my roles? What do I do? And what are the necessary steps that an agent has to do after the death of a loved one? "When someone passes away, one of the first things that you should do, you grieve them. You take a little time to reflect on your relationship with that person and spend some time grieving your loss. And then, the next step really should be sitting down with a competent estate planning and or elder law attorney to answer some questions about the legal steps or legal requirements after someone dies. "I recently had a case where an individual was ill for a long time and his mom actually was his power of attorney. She'd acted on his behalf. She obviously loved her son deeply... And after he died, the mom — thinking, hey, I'm this is my son, I’m the power of attorney — actually started giving away his personal property, taking steps to administer his estate. However, his will named a different executor and different beneficiaries who were his minor nieces and nephews. Luckily, it was a good family and we were able to fix everything that had gone wrong. However, her lack of understanding of her role and what happened after her son died could have very, very easily led to her being in trouble for improperly distributing assets." "I met with a client very recently whose father was an estate planning attorney, and she's aged herself now, she's in her seventies or eighties. And she said, my father told me he became an estate planning attorney because he liked and loved people... I couldn't understand that when I was a child, because I thought he just filled out paperwork. But now that I'm realizing the humanity of aging, and the humanity of assisting family members through the death of a loved one, I've really come to realize that — especially with estate planning, different from other laws — really is about caring for your clients. It's really not just checking the boxes of an administration, but being that support system for that individual who has recently lost a loved one." "One of the main reasons you do want to meet with that estate planning attorney after the death of a loved one is there are significant legal obligations that are thrust upon an agent named in a will, and you start acting in that role, then you're accepting some of those legal responsibilities. And so the role of that attorney is to guide the executor or the trustee through those legal requirements. There are a number of steps that a trustee and/or an executor have to follow. There are both federal and state deadlines that need to be met. There are obligations they have to fulfill, there are notices they have to provide. And most people will act as an executor or a trustee a handful of times in their life. Once, twice, maybe a few more. And they just don't have the time to actually learn all of their obligations. So a good estate planning attorney should be able to sit down with an executor or a trustee and then hold their hand through an entire administration." Learn more: About Andrea LeeLegacy Estate Planning...

    16분
  7. 2월 5일

    Parents Moving In With You? Things To Think About

    With multi-generational housing on the rise – aging parents moving in with their adult children — this segment looks at the complex issue from the child's point of view. Elder law attorney Andrea Lee from Legacy Estate Planning joins Suzanne Newman on the Answers for Elders podcast to talk about expectations and approaches. Andrea says, "There's obviously many ways this can be set up... And the big question that we always want to advise is sitting down and formulating a plan of what that would look like, not just structurally, but emotionally. If mom and dad were to live in there, if mom and dad are investing hundreds of thousands of dollars to modify a house or to add an apartment, then the conversation needs to be had. My recommendation is two kitchens, two living areas. That has been a proven need to make long term care housing happy for everyone, is their home separate space, so you're not constantly in each other's hairs. But the conversation the child needs to have with their parent is, 'hey, if you're investing all this money and you're living with me, both parties need to be protected.' So you have to have a plan. "What about the time when mom and dad die? What is going to happen with that money they've invested? Do they expect to be put on that deed? Do they expect to earn an ownership interest in that property, or are they going to treat it as a gift to the child and say, 'I'm giving you this $200, $300,000, and my hope is you let me live in this apartment that we're building. That creates a risk for the parent, because what if the kids change their minds after a few years? They don't want mom and dad to live there anymore. If it's a gift, the parents aren't protected. But if the parents own an ownership interest in that house, then it opens the kids up to the possibility of, if mom or dad die, and that becomes a part of their will, or distributed through their trust, might they be in a position where they have to sell their own house to pay off a sibling? You don't want them to be in that position either." Andrea adds, "Many questions can arise if your parents are thinking of living with you. it's absolutely essential that the parent and the child sit down and discuss these possible scenarios. And because most people only do this once in their life, it is best done if that parent and that child sits down with professionals who have experience guiding families through creating multi-generational housing. So you can discuss the pros and the cons and the risks to the parents and to the child." Learn more: About Andrea LeeLegacy Estate Planning websiteLegacy Estate Planning podcasts Check out our affiliate podcast Alzheimer’s Speaks.

    15분
  8. 2월 5일

    Moving In With Your Adult Child? Things To Think About

    Since COVID, there has been a 40% increase in multi-generational housing: either senior parent or parents have moved in with their children, or kids who can’t afford to live on their own have moved back home again. For an aging parent, they wonder: should I sell my house? Should I invest money in my son or daughter's home? Should I move in with them? What does that mean for my overall estate plan, my assets? How does that affect the other heirs if I have other children? Elder law attorney Andrea Lee from Legacy Estate Planning joins Suzanne Newman on the Answers for Elders podcast to talk about this complex issue. Andrea says, "I'm a huge proponent of multi-generational housing. If you want your kids to help you, it shouldn't be a burden to them. My own mom and dad bought a house half a mile from me, and that's what allowed us to keep my mom home for ten years after her dementia diagnosis, because we were able to support my dad and provide that care. And it's even easier if you can live within the same house, because that even decreases that burden of having to go somewhere else to help with that day to day care that people frequently need as they age. "Now in some instances, maybe a multi-generational house itself is not the best option, or it's not feasible. But at minimum, you need to live within a mile of your kids... I was part of that sandwich generation, where I had young children at home and I had a mom and dad who needed help. And I'm an attorney, and I work full time. And it was overwhelming at times for me to try and balance my kids, their sports, their school, dinner, homework, work, and also care for my parents. And so for any parent who's out there, moving near your child so that they don't have to drive 30 minutes — that's an hour out of your day, that's valuable time that really causes a lot of stress for your children. "One of the challenges I have found as an elder law attorney with multi-generational housing is combining two households. That's so hard to do, it can actually increase stress a lot. So if you want to live together, the goal is that it is beneficial for everyone, and not just you as a parent. First, take a step back and say, 'I want to make sure I'm not overly burdening my child,' and setting up that expectation of what your child is going to do for you, listening to them in their circumstances... "Mom and dad are thinking, I'm going to make a very large investment. I'm going to remodel my son or my daughter's home so that I can have a downstairs living area that is wheelchair accessible, and that I can age in for the rest of my life. Well, then you have to have that conversation, if mom and dad died a few years later, that money has been invested into that child's house and the other children aren't going to get the benefit of that. So those parents need to make sure they've updated their estate plan. They've created a deed that allows that resource to then pass to the child with whom they're living. Or if that's not what they want, they have to have that clear conversation and expectation with that child. But also with other members of the family, they don't want to be in a circumstance where mom and dad die. Something happens. They can no longer remain in that home, and people are fighting over the investment mom and dad made into living there. And what's going to happen to that? There's so many ways it can go wrong, that's extremely important for clients who are considering doing this, sit down with an expert who has a lot of knowledge of multi-generational housing and issues that need to be addressed when making that decision." Learn more: About Andrea LeeLegacy Estate Planning websitea...

    13분
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Answers for Elders is the North Star in Navigating Senior Care.  Our content is designed to Empower Seniors and their Families through the Daunting Journey of Aging. Featuring our host, Suzanne Newman and top industry providers across the USA, together, we support, coach and assist seniors, caregivers and their families in finding the best independent solutions in world of aging, with a comprehensive line-up of topics covering Health & Wellness, Life Changes, Living Options, and Money & Law.

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