Posts Tagged ‘Nova Scotia’

Free workshops on caring for aging parents.

On October 20, Rob Poirier from Home Instead Senior Care will be presenting the first of 4 free workshops on Caring for Your Parents.

The workshop topics include: Recognizing the Signs of Aging, Communicating with Seniors, Long-distance Care Giving and Choosing a Home Care Provider. The workshops are targeted at adults with aging parents.

For more information, contact

Home Instead Senior Care

5991 Spring Garden Road, Suite 485
Halifax, Nova Scotia  B3H 1Y6
Phone 902-429-2273
www.homeinstead.com

GANS hosts first [un]conference November 28, 2010

The Gerontology Association of Nova Scotia is pleased to announce that we will be holding our first ever unconference, November 28, 2010 at the Alderney Gate Public Library in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. Registration for this one day event is $50 ($25 for seniors or students) and you do not need to be a GANS member to register. Refreshments and lunch are included in the cost of registration.

The theme of the conference is “How do we promote health aging in Nova Scotia?” Our keynote speaker will be geriatrician Dr. Kenneth Rockwood,  the director of  Geriatric Medicine Research at Dalhousie University.

What is an unconference? Unlike a traditional conference, an unconference is a series of hosted conversations where ideas, information and interests can be exchanged. It lets YOU (the participants) decide what conversations you would like to engage in. You can host a conversation, and you can choose which conversations you want to participate in. The idea is to create an environment that promotes networking and exchange of ideas related to the theme of promoting healthy aging.

What does it mean to host a conversation? There is no set format for hosting your conversation. You can give a traditional slide show, you can introduce a topic you are interested in and let everyone discuss it around a table. You can sing and dance if you want! The format allows you to choose whatever way you are most comfortable with. As the host, you have chosen to start the conversation, but everyone who comes will be there because they feel they have something to offer, or want to learn more about or from the ideas of others.

What’s a suitable topic for a conversation? Anything that is of interest to you, and that falls under the general topic of promoting healthy aging in Nova Scotia.

To register online, or download a registration form to print, click here.

Family Caregiver Education Series

The Adult Day Program Association of Nova Scotia, in conjunction with the Alzheimer’s Society of Nova Scotia is presenting a series designed for family caregivers of dementia patients. This series will include presentations, and interactive activities to help prepare family members for their new role

Who: Family members who are providing care and support to someone recently diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease or other dementia (ADRD).
When: Wednesday evenings from Sept. 26-Nov. 3, 2010
Time: 6pm-8pm. Where: 10 Mount Hope Ave, Halifax NS . (Oakwood Terrace)
To Register: Call Andrea Leahey at 405-4400

GANS Lunch and Learn video available online

The first video from this spring’s series of Lunch and Learns isnow available for online viewing.  this video features Dr. Paige Moorhouse’s lecture on the new Palliative and Therapeutic Harmonization Clinic, which offers resources and skills for chronically ill older adult to assist them in dealing with their current and future medical issues/wishes.

The video is in four parts, due to its length, and can be viewed at the following links:

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

For more information about the PATH Clinic, you can contact peggyhobbs@cdha.nshealth.ca

Thanks to the Geriatric Medicine Research Unit for hosting these videos on their YouTube channel! There are other videos there on topics such as driving and dementia, frailty, and more.

GANS Networking Tuesday June 08 – the Digital Divide and Seniors

Please join us on June 08 at the Foggy Goggle on Argyle Street in Halifax for our monthly networking night. Click here for Networking June 2010 details

Dan Robichaud, Executive Director Of Halifax Regional C@P,  will give a short talk about the Digital Divide and Seniors.  49d058a55d133_snowmodels7_jpg_900x2000_q85

What is HRC@P?

C@P is a government of Canada initiative to provide Internet access to those who would not normally have it due to economic, social or geographic barriers. Currently 40 C@P sites in the Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM) provide urban and rural communities affordable access to computers and the internet. Many C@P sites offer computer training including MS Office, Internet safety, Global Positioning Systems, video podcasting, and web page development. HRCAP provides over 15 full time jobs and injects over $1.7 million in the local economy, annually.

What is the Digital Divide?

“…the gap between people with effective access to digital and information technology, and those with very limited or no access at all. It includes the imbalance both in physical access to technology and the resources and skills needed to effectively participate as a digital citizen.”

GANS Award of Recognition 2010 – Call for Nominations

As part of GANS’ 25th anniversary in 2002, we established the Award of Recognition. This Award is intended to recognize an individual who has made an exceptional personal and/or professional contribution to the field of aging through either an enhancement to the understanding of aging, or by providing service to the field through research, advocacy, professional or volunteer work. Exceptional for this Award means that the individual has gone above and beyond what would be expected of them in his/her professional or volunteer capacity.GASN logo copy

At this time, we are seeking nominations for this year’s Award to be presented at our upcoming annual general meeting (June 23rd, 2010 at Spencer House). I am enclosing a Nomination Form that provides information on the process and evaluation criteria. The nomination of a candidate must be supported by three individuals; one of these must be a current member of the Gerontology Association of Nova Scotia. The deadline for nominations to be considered for this year’s Award is June 9th, 2010. At that time, a committee will review the nominations and make their selection.

You can download a pdf of the application by click in  this link:  Award of Recognition – Call for nominations 2010

Is there value in preventative measures for Alzheimer’s disease?

A recent report by a panel of experts from the US National Institutes of Health has cast some doubt on the usefulness of a healthy diet, crossword puzzles and regular exercise in terms of delaying or reducing the severity of Alzheimer’s disease. cross

As the CBC reported, the panel expressed their doubt thus:

“We wish we could tell people that taking a pill or doing a puzzle every day would prevent this terrible disease, but current evidence doesn’t support this,” said Dr. Martha Daviglus, conference panel chair and professor of preventive medicine and medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago. The panel, however, said the public needs to understand such strategies are at best only loosely associated with an improved outcome. The cause-and-effect relationship, if any, is unclear, Daviglus said.

CAKEns contacted Dr. Kenneth Rockwood, a leading researcher into dementia who currently holds the Kathryn Allen Weldon Chair in Alzheimer’s research at Dalhousie University here in Nova Scotia, for comment on this.  His response:

There is a problem with these sorts of recommendations, which rely on “the evidence”.  The evidence is biased towards pharmacological interventions, which outnumber non-pharmacological interventions by hundreds to one.  So if the experts want to wait until there are multi-hundred person randomized controlled trials before daring to recommend exercise as a useful strategy in AD, we will wait a long time.  More valuable, it seems to me, are data from cohort studies, in which people who exercise and have AD can be compared against those who do not exercise, and have AD.  Although the design of a study like this means that we can never know for sure if exercise would work in people who take it up because they have AD, the data do allow some insight. (There are also elaborate reasons why we cannot know for sure from a randomized trial if the patient in front of us will benefit either, but that is another matter.)

Our analysis of data from the Canadian Study of Health and Aging suggests that there are cognitive benefits to exercise, even in people with dementia.  The open access reference for this work is: Middleton LE, Mitnitski A, Fallah N, Kirkland SA, Rockwood K.Changes in cognition and mortality in relation to exercise in late life: a population based study. PLoS One. 2008 Sep 1;3(9):e3124.

You can read the full report form the National Institutes of Health panel here.

China-Canada Research Collaboration travels to Beijing.

An innovative collaboration between research groups in Beijing,  China and Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada is leading to a better understanding of the state of the aging population in China.

Left to right: Xiaowei Song, Pulin Yu, Kenneth Rockwood, Chinese Community Doctors (3), Xianghua Fang

Left to right: Xiaowei Song, Pulin Yu, Kenneth Rockwood, Chinese Community Doctors (3), Xianghua Fang

Led in Canada by Dr. Kenneth Rockwood of the Geriatric Medicine Research Unit (GMRU) and in China by Dr. Xianghua Fang at the Beijing Institute of Geriatrics, a team of researchers are spending three years working together on issues that arise due to an aging population

The increasing proportion of elderly people presents multiple challenges for health care, and this is particularly dramatic in China where  between 2000 and 2050, the proportion of people aged 65 and older will rise from 7% to 23%, numbering more than 332 million.

There is a great amount of health data on this population  accumulated in China, but the research capacity to process and explore these data is still limited.  This collaboration makes  use of resources and skills of those at the GMRU to help advance understanding of this problem in China.

Representing the Chinese team in Canada is Shi Jing, an epidemiologist who is not only acquiring the skills to analyze the Chinese datasets, but will take these skills back with her to China at the end of her one year stay here, and pass these on to other researchers there.

The Canadian team is currently preparing for a trip to China in May, where they will make several presentations at the 3rd National Conference of the Prevention of Common Diseases in the Elderly in Yichang Hubei, May 7-9.  The China-Canada Collaboration is funded jointly by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Institute of Aging) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China.

Public Sessions on Financial Abuse of Seniors

The Nova Scotia Centre on Aging and the  Legal Information Society of Nova Scotia are presenting several public sessions across Nova Scotia to launch a new information guide “It’s in Your Hands” to inform seniors and their families about financial abuse—and how to stay safe.

Seniors Info Session poster

Information sessions for service providers are also being held across the province. Topics range from fraud to wills to power of attorney to grandparents’ rights, and more. Details of these events can be found here or here you can also call 902-454-2198 for more information.

Public Lecture: Our Aging Society – Who Cares? A Nova Scotia Reality Check

Dr. Janice Keefe, director of the Nova Scotia Centre on Aging, will present a free public lecture on May 05, 2010 entitled Our Aging Society-Who Cares? A Nova Scotia Reality Check.

The Nova Scotia Centre for Aging is located at Mount Saint Vincent university, in HRM. drkeef

For more than 15 years, the NSCA has worked in collaboration with many others to advance knowledge on aging-related issues. Our work includes conducting research projects and evaluation studies; organizing lectures, workshops and conferences; developing and reviewing curricula; developing educational materials such as manuals, information kits and videos; and providing consultative services to community, organizations and government. We invite you to learn more about us by viewing our current and past projects and the resources we have produced. It is our goal that through research, education and community engagement the NSCA will inform policy and practice to enhance the quality of life of older adults and their families. “

Date: May 5, 2010

Time: 7:00pm

Location: Bella Rose Arts Centre, Halifax West High School, 283 Thomas Raddall Drive, Halifax

Or watch LIVE via the web:

www.msvu.ca/nsca

www.caregiversns.org

www.heartandstroke.ns.ca

www.alzheimer.ns.ca

www.lifeandminds.ca

Refreshments and informational exhibits to follow

For more information please contact:

Brenda at Caregivers NS at 421-7390 or 1-877-488-7390