How Family Caregivers Can Keep Loved Ones Safe as Stay-at-Home Orders Lift
How Family Caregivers Can Keep Loved Ones Safe as Stay-at-Home Orders Lift"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
By
Barry J. Jacobs, AARP
En español Published May 27, 2020Shirley felt unsettled after ending the call with her adult son, Kyle. He had talked excitedly about their state's announcement that the stay-at-home order had been lifted and that residents
could assemble if they adhered to social distancing. He, his wife and their teenage children were eager to take her and his father, Louis, who had moderate dementia, to their favorite
restaurant. How soon could they go? he'd asked.
But Shirley had misgivings. She didn't know how to reconcile the TV images she saw nowadays of joyful, mostly mask-free people packing parks and beaches with the online reports she read
about nursing home residents, little older than she, dying of COVID-19. She wanted to have fun, too, and couldn't wait to see her grandchildren in person again but wondered if it was truly
safe for people like her and Louis to return to normal life. He had diabetes and high blood pressure, as well as his dementia. She had the early stages of COPD, from having been a heavy
smoker in her youth. Weren't those the kinds of chronic diseases that doctors said made people more vulnerable to infection? Was the time right to take a chance?
Many Americans are struggling with similar questions. These decisions are more pointed and consequential, however, for family caregivers. They must think about not just their own safety but
that of their loved ones, who may no longer have the judgment to choose for themselves. That's a weighty responsibility. What if a caregiver makes the wrong choice? How guilty would she feel
if the care recipient became sick and died? Would other family members respond with sympathy or blame?
These are personal decisions with no clear-cut answers. All family caregivers will have to consider the pandemic's spread in their immediate vicinity, their loved ones’ specific health
conditions, the level of contact they'd consider having with others, and their degree of tolerance for risk. With so much uncertainty about the coronavirus's course in the months ahead, they
will also have to be prepared to change tack according to evolving circumstances. What process should caregivers use to make these difficult decisions? Here are some thoughts.
Startwith medical advice
Health care professionals are inherently cautious — “First, do no harm,” they're famously taught — so soliciting their opinions about what's safe and what's not is a good place to start.
They don't decide what you should do; you do, based in part on the guidance they provide and the needs you and your care recipient have. But if they know you and your loved one well and give
their blessing to venturing out of the house to reunite with family, then it is likely prudent.
Consider available informationNowadays the airwaves are filled with politicians and public health experts imploring you to do one thing or another to safeguard your health, bolster the economy or support your neighbors.
All this should be taken under advisement. You should weigh the information and perspectives they provide as but one factor in your determination of what works best for you and your family.
They are not the last word on your situation.
Trending News
Experts to help tackle poor behaviour in schools - GOV.UKA new team of experts are set to help schools curb unruly behaviour and prevent disruption in the classroom.Schools with...
Transforming wearable technology with advanced ultra-flexible energy harvesting and storage solutionsFlexible organic photovoltaics and energy storage systems have profound implications for future wearable electronics. He...
Phil Mickelson knows this US Open could be last Grand Slam chancePhil Mickelson is well aware that his window to complete the career Grand Slam is getting slimmer and slimmer. But the 5...
British Universities During 1957–61 : University Grants Committee Interim ReportNews Published: 02 June 1962 British Universities During 1957–61 : University Grants Committee Interim Report Nature vol...
Barcelona identify luis suarez replacement with three-man shortlistMonaco’s Wissam Ben Yedder is another back-up target of Barcelona’s but they hope to get Rodrigo to sign above the dotte...
Latests News
How Family Caregivers Can Keep Loved Ones Safe as Stay-at-Home Orders LiftBy Barry J. Jacobs, AARP En español Published May 27, 2020Shirley felt unsettled after ending the call with her adult ...
Tory rebels: who voted against boris johnson’s timetable?HOW DID THE TORY REBELS VOTE? The 21 Tory rebels are crucial to anything the Government wants to achieve. All of them ha...
Midlands healthcare worker jailed over NHS hospital sex attack on patientMidlands healthcare worker jailed over NHS hospital sex attack on patientJyv Cagampang, 35, has been locked up for sexua...
HM Land Registry Business Plan 2021 to 2024 - GOV.UKCorporate report HM Land Registry Business Plan 2021 to 2024 Our business plan for the next 3 years.From: HM Land Regist...
The Say Shea Kids - NymagThe Mets left a little something behind in Atlanta for the Yankees. In the basement of Turner Field, just inside the doo...