Archive | March, 2013

No more Michigan Quality Community Care Council … it’s now MPHI

According to an e-mail I got from Cathy McRae at the MQC3, the Michigan Quality Community Care Council has been ended. The state has moved the function of this Registry to an organization called MPHI. MPHI has taken over the MQC3’s phone number, which is 800-979-4662. If you should need assistance with finding a Home Help provider, please contact MPHI at that number.

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CSI Co-op Liaison Mission

Hi All,Here’s more information from Sheila about the role of your liaison at the Co-op.

Liaison Duties/Mission Statement
Liaisons are an important link between the co-op and CSI Support. They provide the volunteers with the right tools (training, resources and support) to run and maintain their own co-ops. This has allowed for CSI to maintain its vision of providing low-income cooperative housing while allowing seniors to maintain an active and independent lifestyle.

Liaison mission statement: A liaison is responsible to promote the belief in the cooperative principles and to assist in creating a strong community. This is accomplished by providing continuous education to empower all members to participate in the management of their cooperative while maintaining a positive and respectful attitude by using the democratic control system where every member has a vote.
Purpose: Liaisons support, encourage, educate and guide our members in the orderly management of the cooperative community.

Liaison Duties:
• Assist in providing an open and civil environment in the exchange of ideas.
• Know and understand federal, state and local fair housing, HUD and CSI guidelines.
• Educate and participate in the planning and implementation of co-ops and apartment inspections, for long range planning and according to Housing Quality Standards.
• Regularly review, understand and explain co-ops’ monthly, quarterly and annual financial reports.
• Create and present educational and workshop material.
• Encourage a team approach to problem solving.
• Serve as adviser at co-op meetings as appropriate (including council, general, leasing and finance meetings).
• Monitor waitlist, occupancy and marketing of each co-op.
• Respond when needed to co-op emergencies.
• Communicate and report overall co-op status to the CSI office.
• Prepare for and follow up on management occupancy reviews and REAC inspections.
• Through innovation and enthusiasm, help the co-op maximize volunteer participation.
• Promote networking within the co-op community.
• Carry out any other duties to help fulfill our statement of purpose and mission.

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Wayne County Sheriff’s “Shred-it-Day”

The Wayne County Sheriff’s Office will partner with the U.S. Postal Service to host a FREE “Shred-it-Day” document shredding event from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, March 6 on W. Hancock Street adjacent to Sheriff’s headquarters at 4747 Woodward, Detroit. 

Residential customers may bring up to four (4) boxes of personal identification information to be shredded at no cost.  PAPER ONLY (mail, bills, credit card statements, tax documents, etc.)

Metal, plastic or other objects mixed in will not be accepted.  No mail or documents for shredding will be accepted from businesses.

Customers should enter shredding area on W. Hancock at Woodward. They should have paper items stored in boxes or containers and be ready for quick drive up and drop off.

The Postal Service also will distribute free resources to help people protect their privacy, manage money and debt, avoid identity theft and steer clear of frauds and scams.

The event is part of National Consumer Protection Week.

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Immigration and Naturalization Information Session

The attached invitation is for the upcoming Naturalization Information Session at the United States Citizenship & Immigration Services office in Detroit.  It is scheduled for Friday, March 29, 2013 (from 1:00 to 3:00 pm).  This session is a great experience for community based organizations, the general public, permanent residents, as well as citizenship applicants awaiting their interview to understand and help demystify the Naturalization process.

 

If you would like to attend this session, please RSVP (including the number of your group), no later than March 28, 2013, by using either the e-mail or phone number listed on the invitation.  Thank you.

 

 

Regards,

 

Frank Castria

Community Relations Officer, USCIS Detroit, MI

Office- 313-926-4211  Fax- 313-926-4210

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PATH Workshops in Oakland and Macomb

Sandra Cummings from AWBS called to make sure that SCs received information about the availability of PATH workshops in Oakland and Macomb Counties. Please see the attached flyer. Sandra’s number is 313-736-5574 or scummings@AWBS.org.

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Medical Procedures to Avoid

For the Elderly, Medical Procedures to Avoid

By PAULA SPAN

The Choosing Wisely campaign, an initiative by the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation in partnership with Consumer Reports, kicked off last spring. It is an attempt to alert both doctors and patients to problematic and commonly overused medical tests, procedures and treatments.

It took an elegantly simple approach: By working through professional organizations representing medical specialties, Choosing Wisely asked doctors to identify “Five Things Physicians and Patients Should Question.”

The idea was that doctors and their patients could agree on tests and treatments that are supported by evidence, that don’t duplicate what others do, that are “truly necessary” and “free from harm” — and avoid the rest.

Among the 18 new lists released last week are recommendations from geriatricians and palliative care specialists, which may be of particular interest to New Old Age readers. I’ve previously written about a number of these warnings, but it’s helpful to have them in single, strongly worded documents.

The winners — or perhaps, losers?

Both the American Geriatrics Society and the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine agreed on one major “don’t.” Topping both lists was an admonition against feeding tubes for people with advanced dementia.

“This is not news; the data’s been out for at least 15 years,” said Sei Lee, a geriatrician at the University of California, San Francisco, and a member of the working group that narrowed more than 100 recommendations down to five. Feeding tubes don’t prevent aspiration pneumonia or prolong dementia patients’ lives, the research shows, but they do exacerbate bedsores and cause such distress that people often try to pull them out and wind up in restraints. The doctors recommended hand-feeding dementia patients instead.

The geriatricians’ list goes on to warn against the routine prescribing of antipsychotic medications for dementia patients who become aggressive or disruptive. Though drugs like Haldol, Risperdal and Zyprexa remain widely used, “all of these have been shown to increase the risk of stroke and cardiovascular death,” Dr. Lee said. They should be last resorts, after behavioral interventions.

The other questionable tests and treatments:

No. 3: Prescribing medications to achieve “tight glycemic control” (defined as below 7.5 on the A1c test) in elderly diabetics, who need to control their blood sugar, but not as strictly as younger patients.

No. 4: Turning to sleeping pills as the first choice for older people who suffer from agitation, delirium or insomnia. Xanax, Ativan, Valium, Ambien, Lunesta — “they don’t magically disappear from your body when you wake up in the morning,” Dr. Lee said. They continue to slow reaction times, resulting in falls and auto accidents. Other sleep therapies are preferable.

No. 5: Prescribing antibiotics when tests indicate a urinary tract infection, but the patient has no discomfort or other symptoms. Many older people have bacteria in their bladders but don’t suffer ill effects; repeated use of antibiotics just causes drug resistance, leaving them vulnerable to more dangerous infections. “Treat the patient, not the lab test,” Dr. Lee said.

The palliative care doctors’ Five Things list cautions against delaying palliative care, which can relieve pain and control symptoms even as patients pursue treatments for their diseases.

It also urges discussion about deactivating implantable cardioverter-defibrillators, or ICDs, in patients with irreversible diseases. “Being shocked is like being kicked in the chest by a mule,” said Eric Widera, a palliative care specialist at the San Francisco V.A. Medical Center who served on the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine working group. “As someone gets close to the end of life, these ICDs can’t prolong life and they cause a lot of pain.”

Turning the devices off — an option many patients don’t realize they have — requires simple computer reprogramming or a magnet, not the surgery that installed them in the first place.

The palliative care doctors also pointed out that patients suffering pain as cancer spreads to their bones get as much relief, the evidence shows, from a single dose of radiation than from 10 daily doses that require travel to hospitals or treatment centers.

Finally, their list warned that topical gels widely used by hospice staffs to control nausea do not work because they aren’t absorbed through the skin. “We have lots of other ways to give anti-nausea drugs,” Dr. Widera said.

You can read all the Five Things lists (more are coming later this year), and the Consumer Reports publications that do a good job of translating them, on the Choosing Wisely Web site.


Paula Span is the author of “When the Time Comes: Families With Aging Parents Share Their Struggles and Solutions.”

Source: New York Times, 2/28/13,  http://newoldage.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/28/for-the-elderly-lists-of-tests-to-avoid/

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