A.I.P. (aging in place) remodel tips

 

Modern home under construction
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You’ve decided you’re going to stretch your retirement funds and enjoy your life more by remaining in your own home for as long as you can. This is “aging in place”, and you’ll find a quick search of the internet will yield abundant results for this term. In fact, there are even designers who have earned the “CAPS” designation, or certified aging in place specialist. Not surprisingly, you’ll find that they have design ideas that you probably hadn’t thought about- it’s not all ramps and grab bars. These design ideas aren’t all complex either; some are as simple as removing rugs that might slip and cause a fall. Others are more complicated, requiring relocating walls, plumbing and electrical wiring. A quick remodel is all you need, right?

If you’ve remodeled before, you know what it’s like. For those of you who haven’t, let me tell you what it’s like. 

Electrical wiring and breaker box in basement ...

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A good tradesman who is familiar with the area can probably tell you how a home was built. An experienced one will not only know today’s building codes, methods and standards, but those of previous eras as well. The trick is to have enough experience that you can look at the structure and decide how you would have built it yourself. No matter how talented the tradesman, with remodels you just never know what you’re going to find when you cut open a wall, floor or ceiling. There may be a drain pipe in the wall that has been leaking since the day it was installed causing rot and mildew that will need to be repaired. Sometimes the wall you planned to move by two feet was where all the electrical wiring went from the first floor to the second, or turns out to support the roof. You may also discover that the house has already been remodeled by a previous incompetent tradesman. Shortcuts save money and don’t look bad at all when concealed by sheet rock, but are expensive and difficult to fix; that’s why they were taken in the first place. 

Asbestos removal with full protection and sour...

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Depending upon the age of your home, hazardous materials may be disturbed during the remodel. Asbestos and lead paint are two that are probably most common. Other hazards can be less obvious, like dead rodents or their droppings being added to the dust that is everywhere with any remodeling project. Abating lead and asbestos can significantly increase the costs of your project and complicate changes. 

With a remodel, you’re going to have a difficult time avoiding going over budget and behind schedule. Where do you stop the brand new plumbing and connect it to the old galvanized pipes that are full of rust? Do you connect the brand new electrical wiring to the existing overloaded fuse panel, or to the circuit breaker box which is full of obsolete breakers and code violations? Where do you stop the new flooring? Do you make the door hardware, electrical trim and paint match only the walls you have remodeled, or do you change them in the whole room? Do you upgrade your ductwork while you have the roof removed, or do you add extra insulation to the walls while they’re open? You can plan, but only so you have something to change later. 

Completed Lutron panel

Image by sparktography via Flickr

 

Your remodel will go through stages: demolition, installation, and trim. There will be noise, dust, construction workers in your home, materials staged in your garage, workman’s trucks blocking the driveway and a plastic toilet in your front yard. There will be interruptions to your water, your electricity or your ability to lock up your home. Your burglar alarm might develop problems it never had before. You’ll be heating or cooling the neighborhood, and someone will dump all their used furniture and appliances in the dumpster that’s ruining your front yard or filling your driveway. Of course this will mean that all the debris that were supposed to go in the dumpster will need to be staged in your back yard until there’s room for it in the dumpster. 

Eventually the project will be complete, and life will begin to return to normal. Of course, there will still be plenty of dust, and it might take until next season for the front lawn to look good again. If your neighbors are still talking to you, you can show them the improvements. Then you’ll start eyeing the next room, and your spouse will start eyeing the yellow pages for a divorce lawyer. 

The real trick to a successful remodel is to get the most benefit for the least cost. These costs include the joys of remodeling as described above as well as the money you pay your contractor. Unless you’re ready for the financial and emotional strain of a full blown remodel (which you aren’t, you just think you are), start with something small and simple. I’m biased towards home automation as a simple remodel with minimum dust, noise and disruption with maximum benefit- including security, comfort and energy savings. In fact, a well designed automation system can simplify future remodel projects by allowing you to remotely control access to and monitor your home. When workers know they’re on camera, they tend to spend less time talking on their cell phone! 

iMyHome
Image by MyOpen Community via Flickr

 

Plan your work, so that you’re not painting a wall you’re going to tear down in six months. Get rid of all the clutter you can, even if it means putting it in storage. Move out for the remodel, but don’t go on vacation where you aren’t able to be contacted- unless you trust your contractor to make expensive decisions for you! Decide where pets, valuables, and fragile items will go during the remodel. Keep a diary of all the activities, conversations, and payments. Take photographs or video of the project as it progresses. Don’t be afraid to ask about something that doesn’t look right as soon as it doesn’t look right. Perhaps the most important part of prudent remodeling is to deal with a licensed contractor and to know the laws you must both comply with.

As always, I’ll let my readers know that my employer offers home automation systems, including GrandCare Systems and Home Automation Incorporated systems.

Home-Automation-Inc-Logo
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GrandCare and the “competition”

The Author, Art Dunn

The Author, Art Dunn

As I have promised readers of my blog, I will always be forthcoming about what products I or my employer offer when I’m discussing them. My employer offers GrandCare Systems at www.yourhomeservesyou.com. I was very much involved in the decision to become a GrandCare dealer. I did a good deal of research to learn about what GrandCare was, what it offered, who was behind it, and what the competition offered. 

Picture of a burglar alarm detection point.
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While I was aware of some of the challenges confronting seniors through my experience installing home automation systems, I was not aware of some of the direct solutions offered by GrandCare. I was aware of Personal Emergency Reporting Systems (P.E.R.S.), and I was aware that a burglar alarm system had some capabilities to be adapted to detect a lack of activity in a home. Unfortunately a P.E.R.S. would do nothing, especially if not worn or if the pendant was out of range of the receiver. Burglar alarm systems would most likely become a nuisance to whomever was to be called if there was no activity in the house, because circumstances would change from time to time. It would also be depending upon those in a central station who are used to burglar and fire alarm signals to understand clearly what the signals from the burglar alarm meant. I’ve often had things interpreted incorrectly by a central station operator, it taught me to keep things simple when involving them. 

When I was first approached to become a GrandCare Dealer, I took a quick look at the website and dismissed it. Thankfully, I was compelled to take a second look at it. That’s when I saw that it was as limited as I had thought it was. I thought it would just take a few medical measurements, that’s it. I realized it did so much more than that- that it preserved communication and connection with family rather than replacing it with a phone call from a central station or a message only when something is wrong. If I list all of the features currently available, this post would quickly become obsolete, so I’ll link you to GrandCare’s website for the latest information about features www.grandcare.com

Main complications of persistent high blood pr...
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GrandCare is as easy to use as an ATM

GrandCare offers the user a simple touch screen interface

I researched the competition with every search phrase I could think of. I keep informed daily about developments in the industry. As of the writing of this entry, I have still seen nothing that offers any real competition to GrandCare. I’ve seen burglar alarm systems that are supposed to “learn” the normal patterns of activity and then call the central station when there’s a deviation from that pattern. Another is a service that calls daily to check in on you. “Hi, Mr. (mispronounce terribly your name here) are you still alive? We just want you to know Mr. (mispronounce it again, just to let you know how well we know you) that we care!”. I saw a device that reminded you to take medication, then spit it out like it was a bubble gum machine, a GPS tracker that needed to be charged and worn by the person who wanders because they forget things (gee- like the tracker?). I’ve seen systems that record some wellness measurements, or that ask how you feel today versus yesterday. I assume it would call someone if you told it I feel miserable today, I was miserable yesterday and I’ll probably feel miserable tomorrow too. Should we just pencil in the whole week for feeling that way now and call it good? 

Conventional (mechanical) sphygmomanometer wit...

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Maybe I’m terribly misrepresenting these other systems. If I am, please correct me. My point is that each system addressed one facet of aging in place, but not all of them, or at least not the important ones. What about the social benefits of staying connected to friends and family with email and pictures? What about listening to music, or hearing your children’s voices? What about seeing pictures from around the world or of various animals, buildings, skylines or art? What about calendars, quotations, scriptures, weather, games and something to engage the mind- like trivia? These were addressed by none of the other systems; would it be fair to call them “competition” since they don’t? None of them let caregivers dictate what “normal” was as far as activities. None of them circumvented the central station, communicating directly with the caregiver via phone, text, email or all three. None of them provided for caregiver notes to family or other caregivers. I don’t know if any of them allowed for printing graphs of data from blood pressure or other wellness measurements, if they recorded them at all. I also didn’t note any of them contacting anyone if things were outside of custom limits or trends. None of them monitored room temperature or would remind the user to put a coat on if it was chilly outside. Amongst other things, none of them could turn on a lamp so that the user wasn’t ever in the dark or walking in to a dark room. 

It was the lack of competition as well as the multiple benefits that made the decision to become a GrandCare dealer an easy one. I invite my readers to do their own research, and decide for themselves what meets their needs best? Something that does half the job for half the price? That would be like buying a car that would only take you to work, but wouldn’t get you home. Even if those solutions meet your needs today, will they meet them tomorrow? "focus on quality"

OK, perhaps not the most informative blog you’ll read today. It was inspired by yet another press release from the “competition” that offered fewer benefits and no real competition to GrandCare that crossed my desktop today on its way to the deleted items folder. I’m hoping that anyone reading this who might have dismissed a GrandCare System as a solution to aging in place to take a second look, like I did.

old television set

Does today's solution meet tomorrow's needs?

 

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As a home care agency, you’re probably acutely aware of the increasing needs of our aging population. As demand for your services increases, qualified caregivers will become more difficult to find. Other agencies may offer better compensation, or they will work privately. You need some way to distinguish yourself from other agencies, to offer more value to your clients, and to increase the efficiency of your caregiver employees. Partnering with a GrandCare and home automation companies could provide you all of these things.Home Automation Incorporated's Omni-touch

There are good reasons you haven’t partnered with any kind of technology companies. You want your customers to spend their money with you, not with somebody else. This would be true if there were only a finite number of customers to be had. In fact, the number of potential customers continues to grow as the population ages. Technology solutions allow you to:

  • Offer your clients more than your competition.
  • Care for more clients with the same payroll expenses.
  • Realize increased profits by offering services that relate directly to the technology.
  • Reduce liability risks by using technology as an unbiased witness to the quality of your care.
  • Increase customer retention by allowing your clients to remain in their homes longer than they otherwise could.
  • Hire and retain better caregivers by offering training, certification and easier record keeping.
  • Increase the satisfaction of your customers by keeping them connected to family, friends, caregivers, healthcare professionals and the world.
  • Offer technology that reduces vulnerability to telephone scammers who contact your clients.

 

healthcare professional

use technology to work with healthcare professionals to care for your clients

GrandCare is as easy to use as an ATM

GrandCare offers the user a simple touch screen interface

Home automation companies can adapt the home to meet the unique and changing needs of your clients in ways that can preserve their independence in a similar fashion to universal design. Automation can cause the lights in the house to flash on and off to notify someone hard of hearing that the doorbell is ringing. Automation can close garage doors if they are forgotten, and won’t forget to turn on security lights in the evening. Automation systems can detect flooding and shut off water if a tub overflows. Automation systems can allow family members or caregivers to verify all the doors and windows are closed from anywhere in the world with an internet or telephone connection.

mobile phone text message
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Tele-wellness systems, such as GrandCare Systems can record wellness readings and verify activity without privacy robbing cameras. One caregiver can rotate from client to client without neglecting others, because programming created for each client’s unique needs will text message, email and call to alert the caregiver to unusual conditions. These could range from wellness measurements outside of normal to not getting out of bed at the usual time. Wellness measurements, caregiver notes, arrival and departure time as recorded by door entries or “clocking in” via the GrandCare System can document caregiver activity as well as client activity such as taking medicine. Calendars for the clients are available to family and caregivers for easy coordination of transportation to doctors or visits with friends. Caregivers can leave notes on the system for other caregivers that are not visible to the client.

Both GrandCare and automation systems can help defend your caregivers against accusations of theft. If valuables are stored in jewelry boxes, dresser drawers or closets, the time and date of them being opened can be recorded for comparison against caregiver activities. If something goes missing from a jewelry box but it wasn’t ever opened when your caregiver is in the home, it could prove innocence without question.

Your benefits and savings depend upon how you and your technology partners learn to benefit each other. They’re used to finding solutions to unique situations and to adapting to their client’s needs.

If you would like to learn more about increasing your profits, contact artdunn@yourhomeservesyou.com. Even if you’re not in the northern California area, there are networks of dealers across the country you would be able to consult with locally.

As always, I’ve promised my blog readers that I’ll completely disclose if I’m writing about a product or service that I or my employer offer. My employer is a GrandCare dealer as well as a dealer for Home Automation Incorporated, an automation system.

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In-home caregivers

As a professional in-home caregiver, your income depends upon your being able to provide care to your clients. If you care for one client, and that client no longer needs your care, you’re out of a job. What if that single client suffers a stroke or a fall, and uncertainty lingers as to the client’s ability to return to the home environment? Do you look for another client, or wait it out while watching your bank account dwindle? What if you find another client and your original client returns home? Do you leave your new client high and dry to return to your old client, who now has no caregivers to return home to? While it’s possible that your original client will continue to pay your normal pay for a week or so just to make sure they have a caregiver when they return home, they may not. It might seem a bit selfish to approach your ailing client or anguished family members to bring your problem- you need an income- to them at that time.

When clients need caregivers, their needs are immediate. When a caregiver is unemployed, the caregivers’ needs are immediate. Having the two coincide is rare. It’s usually that the caregiver needs a client when the client already has a caregiver, or that the client needs a caregiver when the caregiver is occupied with a client. Both the caregiver and the client are looking for security. If the client already has a so-so caregiver, the client may be unwilling to replace them. What if the new caregiver is worse than the old one? What if the new caregiver gets a better offer from someone else? A caregiver with a client is reluctant to leave that client for another. What if the new client doesn’t work out? Will the old client take them back? If the caregiver has “the word out” that they need a client, what if they go to work with the first client who is willing to hire them but then a more attractive client (lives closer to home, pays more, is more pleasant) becomes available a week later? Ethics, loyalty, affection for the client and financial realities are not always aligned.

Quality caregivers are a rare commodity, mediocre caregivers can afford to be so because there is a shortage of in-home caregivers that will be far more acute in coming years. This will coincide with governments being asked to keep expensive promises they can’t afford to keep. It would be a great advantage then, if quality caregivers could care for several clients simultaneously. It would also be a great advantage if clients and could locate and identify quality caregivers who can provide care for multiple clients.

Technology allows us to increase our output, to do more than what we could possibly do without it. Mowing an acre of lawn with scissors can be done, but to get it done in one day you would need an army of people cutting grass with scissors. With a lawnmower, you could cut the same acre of lawn with one person. The lawnmower is technology that allows one person to get more done. Instead of one guard at each of a dozen doors to secure a building, one guard could watch cameras and unlock doors remotely if needed. Again, technology allows one to do the work of many. Why can’t technology allow one quality caregiver to care for multiple clients if there is a technological solution that makes it possible? It can!

A John Deere lawn mower in a Finnish garden.
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Coming soon will be a website where caregivers and clients can connect. Coming soon will be online training for caregivers who want to become certified to use a GrandCare System, to enhance their skills and to help prospective clients to distinguish the quality caregivers from the mediocre ones. Once caregivers obtain certification, they will have access to GrandCare clients nationwide. For more detailed information, contact the author using the link below.

 

Keeping my promise of full disclosure when I’m discussing a product or service I or my employer offer, the services and equipment discussed will be shortly offered by my employer, NANLOW-DUNN inc. Any questions or comments may be directed to artdunn@yourhomeservesyou.com. www.yourhomeservesyou.com

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fire detection in your home

Fire detection in your home           

         

A residential smoke detector is the most famil...

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Fire can spread very quickly in your home. Here’s a video link that gives you some idea of how quickly a small flame grows to engulf the whole house http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqMVm72FMRk&feature=related. As you can see in the video, fires grow from small to large in a very short period of time. As this news video shows, smoke is the usual killer in home fires http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SnAaeTDRxek. How an ionization detector works can be found here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjJnxUwcfoQ&feature=related. I couldn’t find a decent video on photoelectric smoke detectors, so I’ll just explain how they work. Inside the smoke detector is a chamber with ventilation to the air in the room. A light inside the detector is pointed away from a photoelectric eye, and cannot detect the light unless smoke particles or something similar reflects the light onto it. It would be similar to shining a flashlight into the sky on a clear and moonless night; nothing would reflect the flashlight’s light back into your eyes. If you were to do the same on a foggy evening, you would see the light because the fog would reflect the light to your eyes.

Inside view of an optical smoke detector.

upper center of picture is where smoke is reflected from source to eye

 

Local, or monitored?

Smoke or fire alarm detectors can be local only, or monitored. Local only means that they just make noise- beeping, buzzing or a recorded voice. Monitored detectors are connected to an alarm system that is monitored by a central station, where an operator can dispatch the fire department for you. While local detectors are less expensive, they are designed to protect life only. A monitored system can save your life just as well, but it may also save your property by alerting firefighters while the fire may still be small. Since I and my employer sell fire alarm systems, I’m going to be honest about my bias towards monitored systems: If you can afford to have one properly installed and monitored, do it. If the fire traps you by blocking your means of escape, wouldn’t you prefer to have someone else call the fire department? Smoke detectors can be connected to most burglar alarm or automation systems, will work if you lose electrical power, and will even notify the central station if they have technical problems.

Detection

Photoelectric detectors will give false trips when exposed to dust or steam, as well as intentional fires- fireplaces, car exhaust, or dubious culinary activity. As the video above demonstrated, photoelectric detectors are not optimal for detecting open flame fires. To offer greater detection, fixed heat detectors have been added to photoelectric detectors, such as this product: http://www.homecontrols.com/GE-Security-Photoelectric-SmokeHeat-Detector-wCleanMe-2-Wire-GE521BXT. Heat detectors detect the heat of a fire, which will be far more extreme than will be found in normal conditions inside your home. Coupled with the photoelectric smoke detector, they should detect both open flame and smoldering fires. In extreme environments, such as an attic, smoke detectors are likely to be fouled with dust and difficult to access to maintain. In some instances, even the extreme temperatures required to trip a heat detector will exist in the attic. In these cases, rather than using a heat detector set to trip at a fixed temperature, a heat detector that detects a “rate of rise” in temperature should be used. These detectors usually have a very high fixed temperature threshold so that they will detect a fire, but are far less sensitive to ambient temperatures that may be extreme. These detectors look for a rapid rise in temperature such as an open flame fire would create, with the fixed temperature trip acting as a failsafe. Consult local codes and a qualified designer for installations.

Make some noise!

In-home version of a strobe fire alarm
Image via Wikipedia

 

Fire alarm annunciation should be customized to the occupant. Those who are hard of hearing should have strobes in addition to horns or sirens. Where strobes are to be used, they must be synchronized if two strobes can be simultaneously observed to avoid epileptic seizures. A strobe light mounted on the exterior of the home or flashing lights will help guide emergency responders to your home quickly.

Test

Candle wick burning.
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Test your system regularly using the manufacturer’s instructions, or hire someone who is licensed and competent to test them for you. Monitored detectors should notify you if there is a problem with wiring, batteries or dust accumulating in the detectors. Local detectors typically have a push button to test them. Monitored detectors will sometimes have provisions for testing with a magnet, or spray cans of “smoke” can be purchased for testing purposes. Avoid using too much spray smoke because it will lead to the detector prematurely failing due to dust sticking to the inside of the detector.

Questions/comments

As always, if you have questions or comments, you may contact me via email at artdunn@yourhomeservesyou.com, or visit my employer’s website at www.yourhomeservesyou.com.

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What is a GFI?

 

What is a GFI?

 

A G.F.I. is a ground fault interrupter. It detects and then quickly disconnects electrical faults to ground to reduce the risk and duration of electrocution. Below is an explanation of G.F.I.s- how they work, what they look like and some tips about their installation. Layman’s terms and generalizations are used, and electrical code references are not given in an effort to avoid obsolescence due to code revisions. As an educated consumer, you are better prepared for remodels or repairs to your home. Please consult a licensed electrician for current codes and best practices!

 

Due to the way the utility company configures the power feeding a home, electricity in a home is drawn to ground. Quite literally, this is the ground underneath the home; there is a wire that conducts power through the electrical panel to a rod in the ground. As electricity travels through the wires in a home, it must travel through electrical loads (light bulbs, fans, televisions) as it travels to ground. This requires two wires- one to take the power from the electrical panel to the load and another to return it to the panel where it is connected to the ground. If any of the power should find another path to ground other than through these wires, this is a “ground fault”.

 

Wires can safely carry a limited amount of power. If too much power is drawn through a wire, it heats up similar to the wires in a toaster or the filament in a light bulb. In electrical panels, there are circuit breakers or fuses which are designed to disconnect the power to a wire if it is in danger of overheating. Typically, the greater the overload, the faster the circuit breaker trips. Circuit breakers are primarily designed to prevent electrical fires, not to prevent electrocution.

 

The danger of electrocution is greater when water and metal that is connected to ground, like a faucet, are close to one another. This is because the electricity will move along any path it can find to ground, including people, rather than through wires. This would be a ground fault condition, and would be detected by a ground fault interrupter device. Electricity passing through a person can disrupt the beating of a heart, leading to death. This is why ground fault protection is required where electricity and ground are likely to be in the same area, both inside and outside of your home.

 

A Ground Fault Interrupter measures the amount of electricity that passes through it as it travels to and returns from the load on wires. If the same amount flows in both directions, the electricity is travelling to ground exclusively on the wiring. If there is a difference, some of the electricity must be travelling to ground by another path- perhaps a body? If a ground fault is detected, the Ground Fault Interrupter reacts quickly, disconnecting power in a fraction of a second. A circuit breaker would most likely not trip because there wouldn’t be enough power going through you (although it would feel like it) to damage the wires.

 

Ground Fault Protection can be provided by several different types of devices. Most typical is the receptacle, which can be identified by the buttons on the front, one marked “test” and the other marked “reset”. These receptacles provide ground fault protection not only to what you plug in to it, but also to other receptacles that are wired so that their power passes through the GFI receptacle. This is done to reduce expenses, as GFI receptacles are more expensive than standard receptacles. Another device is the GFI circuit breaker, which is installed in the electrical panel and protects everything connected to that circuit from ground faults as well as protecting the wires. Again, this can typically be identified by a button marked “test”.

 

Common problems with ground fault detectors are improper installation and nuisance tripping. If a GFI receptacle is wired incorrectly, a ground fault will trip it but will not disconnect power properly. New GFI receptacles are designed to not work at all if wired incorrectly. Nuisance tripping is when the ground fault protection trips but there is no ground fault. This can happen with some types of appliances, or can be caused by a ground fault detector that is worn out. While builders typically install fewer ground fault detectors with savings in mind, you may wish to consider having ground fault receptacles installed at each receptacle where ground fault protection is needed. It’s far easier to find, it’s easier to isolate what’s tripping it, and it won’t shut anything else off if it trips. If you do upgrade your GFI protection, avoid having a GFI protect another GFI; if a ground fault occurs one or both GFIs may trip making resetting more complicated. If you are installing a GFI where none existed previously, the configuration of the wiring can result in nuisance tripping that a licensed electrician should be able to help you resolve.

 

Ground fault protection should be tested as frequently as recommended by the manufacturer. If you don’t have the manufacturer’s instructions, try to find them on the internet. At a minimum, they should be tested once a month. The test button is acceptable, or you may prefer to use a plug in type tester designed to test ground fault protection. If your ground fault detection does not disconnect the power when tripped, consult a licensed electrician.

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Wellness sensors temporarily unavailable

Nothing witty or highly entertaining, just passing along some information. GrandCare Systems include the option of a blood glucose tester and a pulse oximeter that deliver data to yourGrandCare System. While the hardware and the software are perfectly fine, there is some concern that the new health-care legislation will affect their existing listings and approvals. It’s not a matter of a “sticky gas pedal” or a fuel leak under the hood that may burst into flames under certain conditions; it’s more a matter of “due to new regulations or a new interpretation of an existing regulation, form 66851-32B revision twelve will need to be completed in triplicate and filed with the agencies indicated on the form” While this is being researched to ensure compliance, these items will be unavailable. If you would like to have these items as a wellness option on your system, they can be added to your system as soon as the paperwork with the government is all smoothed out.

We’re from the government, we’re here to help.

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In-home health care costs are more affordable

In case you  haven’t heard of Robert Ripley, he was a world traveller who collected oddities. His collections can be found online or in a museum, and they are all displayed with the premise that you can “Believe It or Not”. http://www.ripleysorlando.com/ Some of these items seemed to defy nature, physics and common sense; others seemed as though the might be credible.

In-home care, rather than care in a facility, is preferable to most and is a less expensive way to receive care. Believe It or Not. That’s not too difficult to believe, is it? The link to the article that describes the savings is here: http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1P3Hz4/www.kiplinger.com/news/article.php/inhome-longterm-care-costs-slower-to-rise-19746161.html .

Since in-home care is less expensive than care in a facility, doesn’t it make sense to want to stay in your own home as long as you can? Doesn’t it also make sense to guard your health and independence to prolong your stay in your own home?

That’s the premise for leasing a GrandCare System. Instead of “Believe It or Not”, it’s “spend thousands per month to live in a home, or spend hundreds per month to stay in your home”. Quite honestly, it’s a pretty simple question to answer. Unfortunately when it’s too late- it’s, well- too late; and it doesn’t make a difference what you believe or not. It will be what you and your family are living, so choose today- lease a GrandCare System and avoid in-home care or in-facility care by guarding your health and independence!

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an interesting product

I really enjoy the recent “Bing” commercials, where actors randomly spout what are supposed to be search results based upon one word uttered by a clueless and bewildered person. Of course, we can all identify with the frustration of too much information from the Internet. It is nice to be able to find information quickly and easily, but it can be overwhelming to wade through the deluge of blogs, pages and links most searches will return.

As usual, I started with a search for “X” and found myself looking at “Y”. That would be “Y” as in “why did this come up in my search?”. Apparently this is the Internet equivalent of looking up something in a printed encyclopedia. You would be flipping through pages looking for the page with the information on say, the USS Pueblo, and a picture of a statue in Pueblo would catch your attention. If you had time, you would read the item related to the picture, which would reference a historical figure. Eventually you would wind up reading about the mating rituals of walruses, while your report on the USS Pueblo languished unwritten.

Now that you’ve all been inspired to research the USS Pueblo and their photographs of the “Hawaiian Good Luck gesture”, I’ll meander back to what I wanted to share with you. (here’s a link http://www.damninteresting.com/the-seizing-of-the-pueblo). I happened across a news article about a DVD that is designed for dementia sufferers and their families, one that offers a respite for those who care for dementia patients. As I clicked the link to read the article, I was reminded of the video tape we used when our children were little (of course now it’s on youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4mRY-kCRUxI). As it turns out, it’s very disconcerting to dementia sufferers to watch regular television- story lines and characters to follow, loud commercials- I would imagine it would be like trying to watch television as someone else surfs from channel to channel.

Here’s the link to the story, with a link in the story to the website. Sorry, no walruses or good luck gestures. http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2010/apr/18/escondido-based-internet-company-has-dvd-to-help/

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What’s “old”?

Recently, I was viewing a website (and I’m frustratingly unable to provide you a link here, perhaps someone has seen this and can help me out?) where children were interviewed by an adult off camera. As anyone who knows who Art Linkletter was, (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_Linkletter for those of you who are lost) kids say the darnedest things! Anyone who is a parent with a talking child is nodding right now, I’m sure. The interviewer was asking the children questions such as “how old are you when you’re old?” or “what happens to you when you are old?”. The definition of “old” varied widely, and was predictably relative to the age of the child being interviewed. Just as “upstream” and “downstream” are relative terms, apparently “old” is based upon your own age.

Unfortunately, “old” really doesn’t wait for you to agree with it that you are “old”; it has its own ideas about when to sneak up on you. Personally, I’m in my early forties. After years of construction work, commuting, crawling under houses and in attics as well as a few car accidents I don’t feel so far removed from “old”. I realize that early forties isn’told; it just feels that way to me. Not being “old” yet, I never thought I would find any value in having a GrandCare System for me. My parents could use one, of course- they’re old.

Because I work for a GrandCare Dealer, I was recently setting up a blood pressure cuff and connecting it to a system. Being a professional, I tested it to make sure that the GrandCare System recorded the measurement. Unfortunately, I noticed that my blood pressure was a bit high. Equally unfortunately, a second test (and a third) did not do anything to improve the measurement. I dismissed the high measurement much in the same way I had dismissed my “marginally high” blood pressure when I visited my doctor several months ago- stress, movement prior to the measurement, and the sun being in my eyes. Day after day, the same unfortunate events would skew my blood pressure in a similar way. Since I had taken the readings over several days using a demonstration GrandCare System in the office, I was able to chart my stress and how often the sun had indeed been in my eyes.

I called my doctor’s office to make an appointment; guess what the nurse told me to do? She directed me to take my blood pressure daily and record those measurements so I could show them to the doctor when I saw him! She told me to write them down in a notebook or something. I bet if I did I would either lose the notebook or stress about remembering it the day I went to the doctor, driving my blood pressure up even further and giving the doctor the distinct impression that I must be old.

Early forties, and already I’m using a GrandCare System for myself? I suppose that should very well dispel the myth that you need to be oldto use a GrandCare System, shouldn’t it? I feel fine (as my doctor said, not in bad shape for someone my age- whatever that means!), but if I hadn’t been working with a GrandCare System I wouldn’t have given my blood pressure a second thought until my next doctor visit. Maybe I might have gotten away with it, but there are still a few people who would read my obituary and shake their heads muttering something about dying young.

Fortunately, my doctor is still older than I am. While I’m on the subject of my doctor, I won’t mention his name here but I will note that he is a doctor at the Veteran’s Administration and I couldn’t be happier with him. I’m sure there are others who are treated poorly at the V.A., but my personal experience has never been anything other than being treated promptly with courtesy, respect and gratitude for my service. This is true of every single person I have dealt with at V.A. facilities, from a janitor I ask for directions in the hospital to the people who answer the phone.

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