Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Lifestyle

The New Tools for Helping Aging Parents

The New Tools for Helping Aging Parents

The pandemic multiplied the needs, concerns and worries of the nation’s 53 million family caregivers—and also ways to help them.

Dori Hazama needed practical and emotional help after her mother fell last fall, spent months in rehab and was about to come home in a wheelchair.

Her parents’ home needed a wheelchair ramp and hospital bed. Her mom needed in-home care. Her dad was overwhelmed. Ms. Hazama was losing her temper.

“I was mad that my mom didn’t try to walk and mad that my dad didn’t make her,” says Ms. Hazama, of Oldsmar, Fla. The pandemic added another layer of anxiety.

A friend directed her to Theresa Wilbanks, a certified caregiving consultant, who offered advice, resources and support remotely.

You May Also Like

World

France, which has opened its borders to Canadian tourists, is eager to see Canada reopen to the French. The Canadian border remains closed...

Health

Kashechewan First Nation in northern Ontario is experiencing a “deepening state of emergency” as a result of surging COVID-19 cases in the community...

World

The virus that causes COVID-19 could have started spreading in China as early as October 2019, two months before the first case was identified in the central city of Wuhan, a new study...

World

April Ross and Alix Klineman won the first Olympic gold medal for the United States in women’s beach volleyball since 2012 on Friday,...