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Elderday, hospice provide resources, respite

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“It takes a lot of patience [because] they don’t really understand what they’re doing to you,” Bozedowski said. “It’s like taking care of a little kid again. They go back to their childhood, but it’s harder because they’re bigger.”

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Elderday social worker Kathy Hanlon is a caregiver specialist who serves 400 Kane County caregivers each year through the Title IIIE Caregivers Counseling Services under the Older Americans Act.

She runs three caregiver support groups –  two for Parkinson’s and one for spouses. She also provides free individual counseling for those caring for someone age 60 or older; the cost is covered by the state grant.

“The family members come, too,” Hanlon said. “It affects their whole family.”

Hanlon said the support groups help caregivers realize they’re not alone.

“When they come in here, it’s a combination of feeling frustration, confusion and anger because they are so frustrated and tired,” Hanlon said.

Fox Valley Volunteer Hospice in Geneva also provides caregiver support, said Christy Pitol, a social worker who serves as bereavement manager.

“We have evolved into a full-care hospice,” Pitol said. “We work with caregivers quite a bit.”

Pitol said hospice will start a caregiver support group in the spring.

In order to get respite for caregivers, Pitol said they turn to other family members – if possible – or paid help or an alternative.

“The means and resources might be there, but sometimes the problem gets solved in a different way,” she said.

The message she has for family, friends and neighbors is to offer to step up and help –  go shopping, help with a mundane chore or offer to sit with the person so the caregiver can leave for a while.

In a hospice situation, the advent of a person’s mortality is frightening. But Pitol said it also is an opportunity for families to communicate.

“When something happens to change a family system, that is an opportunity to start talking about end-of-life planning,” Pitol said. “If we talk about it, we can hope for best and plan for worst.”

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Bozedowski said her father is eighth on a list to get into a dementia unit that accepts Medicaid. He has been on the list for a year.


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