The Parent Care Solution

The Parent Care Solution

Author: Dan Taylor

Publisher:

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781418469733

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The author describes many events from her childhood. When she was a teenager in school at St. Francis Boarding School, she attended a pow-wow in February in the school's basketball gym. The man in charge was Lloyd One Star. She thoroughly enjoyed the dancing and her favorite was the eagle dance. The other events she describes were events that happened throughout her childhood. She incorporated them all into one exciting summer and changed some details to make them more appealing to young readers. She hopes that today's school children will enjoy reading about some Indian cultural similarities and differences between age groups, upbringing, education and experiences.


The Parent Care Conversation

The Parent Care Conversation

Author: Dan Taylor

Publisher: AuthorHouse

Published: 2015-08-29

Total Pages: 285

ISBN-13: 1504926358

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A comprehensive and empathetic program for addressing, planning, and putting into effect long-term parent care. Long-term care for aging parents is a sensitive, often difficult, but ultimately inevitable issue all of us must face. The Parent Care Conversation offers a step-by-step approach for families to follow that will enable them to develop workable plans of action. By first addressing the emotional aspects of long-term care that take into account the parents feelings and wishes, then integrating the practical and financial components, this book will open the door for a critical exchange of information and honest discussion among adult children and their aging parents that has long been the major roadblock to successful elder care. Filled with factual information, useful tips, real-life stories, and practical exercises, The Parent Care Conversation provides a proactive and collaborative solution to the long-term care issues that eventually everyone must face.


When the Time Comes

When the Time Comes

Author: Paula Span

Publisher: Grand Central Life & Style

Published: 2009-06-10

Total Pages: 227

ISBN-13: 0446552224

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What will you do when you get the call that a loved one has had a heart attack or a stroke? Or when you realize that a family member is too frail to live alone, but too healthy for a nursing home? Journalist Paula Span shares the resonant narratives of several families who faced these questions. Each family contemplates the alternatives in elder care (from assisted living to multigenerational living to home care, nursing care, and at the end, hospice care) and chooses the right path for its needs. Span writes about the families' emotional challenges, their practical discoveries, and the good news that some of them find a situation that has worked for them and their loved ones. And many find joy in the duty of caring for an older loved one. There are 45 million Americans caring for family members currently, and as the 77 million boomers continue to age, this number will only go up. Paula Span's stories are revealing and informative. They give a sense of all the emotional and practical factors that go into the major decisions about caregiving, so that readers will be better able to figure out what to do when the time comes for them and their loved ones.


Doing the Right Thing

Doing the Right Thing

Author: Roberta Satow, Ph.D.

Publisher: Penguin

Published: 2006-03-16

Total Pages: 289

ISBN-13: 1101098821

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Now in paperback, one of the first books to help navigate the profound emotional challenges of caring for elderly parents in a strained parent-child relationship.


The Parent Trap

The Parent Trap

Author: Nate G. Hilger

Publisher: MIT Press

Published: 2022-04-26

Total Pages: 306

ISBN-13: 026236901X

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How parents have been set up to fail, and why helping them succeed is the key to achieving a fair and prosperous society. Few people realize that raising children is the single largest industry in the United States. Yet this vital work receives little political support, and its primary workers—parents—labor in isolation. If they ask for help, they are made to feel inadequate; there is no centralized organization to represent their interests; and there is virtually nothing spent on research and development to help them achieve their goals. It’s almost as if parents are set up to fail—and the result is lost opportunities that limit children’s success and make us all worse off. In The Parent Trap, Nate Hilger combines cutting-edge social science research, revealing historical case studies, and on-the-ground investigation to recast parenting as the hidden crucible of inequality. Parents are expected not only to care for their children but to help them develop the skills they will need to thrive in today’s socioeconomic reality—but most parents, including even the most caring parents on the planet, are not trained in skill development and lack the resources to get help. How do we fix this? The solution, Hilger argues, is to ask less of parents, not more. America should consider child development a public investment with a monumental payoff. We need a program like Medicare—call it Familycare—to drive this investment. To make it happen, parents need to organize to wield their political power on behalf of children—who will always be the largest bloc of disenfranchised people in this country. The Parent Trap exposes the true costs of our society’s unrealistic expectations around parenting and lays out a profoundly hopeful blueprint for reform.


Healing Parents

Healing Parents

Author: Michael Orlans

Publisher: CWLA

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 309

ISBN-13: 158760096X

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Learn to change the dynamics in the relationship with your child through the development of secure attachments. Healing Parents gives parents and/or caregivers the information, tools, support, self-awareness, and hope they need to help a wounded child heal emotional wounds and improve behaviorally, socially, and morally. This book is a toolbox filled with practical strategies and research that will help parents and/or caregivers understand their child, learn to respond in a constructive way, and create a healthy environment.


Working Daughter

Working Daughter

Author: Liz O'Donnell

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2019-07-31

Total Pages: 190

ISBN-13: 1538124661

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Working Daughter provides a roadmap for women trying to navigate caring for aging parents and their careers. Using the author’s own experiences as a prime example, it’s ideal for readers who want straight talk and real advice about the challenges and rewards of eldercare while managing a career and family.


A Bittersweet Season

A Bittersweet Season

Author: Jane Gross

Publisher: Knopf

Published: 2011-04-26

Total Pages: 370

ISBN-13: 0307596680

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Just a few of the vitally important lessons in caring for your aging parent—and yourself—from Jane Gross in A Bittersweet Season As painful as the role reversal between parent and child may be for you, assume it is worse for your mother or father, so take care not to demean or humiliate them. Avoid hospitals and emergency rooms, as well as multiple relocations from home to assisted living facility to nursing home, since all can cause dramatic declines in physical and cognitive well-being among the aged. Do not accept the canard that no decent child sends a parent to a nursing home. Good nursing home care, which supports the entire family, can be vastly superior to the pretty trappings but thin staffing of assisted living or the solitude of being at home, even with round-the-clock help. Important Facts Every state has its own laws, eligibility standards, and licensing requirements for financial, legal, residential, and other matters that affect the elderly, including qualification for Medicare. Assume anything you understand in the state where your parents once lived no longer applies if they move. Many doctors will not accept new Medicare patients, nor are they legally required to do so, especially significant if a parent is moving a long distance to be near family in old age. An adult child with power of attorney can use a parent’s money for legitimate expenses and thus hasten the spend-down to Medicaid eligibility. In other words, you are doing your parent no favor—assuming he or she is likely to exhaust personal financial resources—by paying rent, stocking the refrigerator, buying clothes, or taking him or her to the hairdresser or barber.


Becoming Your Own Parent

Becoming Your Own Parent

Author: Dennis Wholey

Publisher: Bantam

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 308

ISBN-13: 9780553347883

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Readers are guided inside a series of intimate and powerful group meetings where fourteen "adult children" reveal the devastating effects of their chaotic childhoods, and the leading experts in the field of recovery offer insight and solutions.


Caring for Your Parents

Caring for Your Parents

Author: Hugh Delehanty

Publisher: Sterling Publishing Company, Inc.

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 260

ISBN-13: 140275857X

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"Practical advice you can trust from the experts at AARP"--Cover.