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Saturday, March 26, 2011

Alzheimer's patient in custody !



Alzheimer's patient in custody

Man who hurt wife last fall questioned for senior's assault
 
By: Carol SandersWinnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION


Posted: 03/26/2011 1:00 AM | 
Joe McLeod, with his wife Rose, was questioned by police for an assault on a fellow resident of Parkview Place.



Joe McLeod, with his wife Rose, was questioned by police for an assault on a fellow resident of Parkview Place. (FAMILY HANDOUT / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS ARCHIVES)





A Winnipeg man with Alzheimer's disease who was locked up for a month last fall is back in police custody and a fellow resident of his downtown care home is in critical condition after an alleged assault Thursday night.
The family of 69-year-old Joe McLeod, who was questioned by police on Friday, is worried about the man hurt in the incident.
"If it was me and it was my father assaulted, I'd be mortified," Faye Jashyn, McLeod's daughter, told the Free Press on Friday. "The other family must be horrified that their parent is hurt."
City police confirmed officers responded to a report of an assault on an elderly man at Parkview Place at about 10 p.m. Thursday. Another elderly man who lives at the care home at 440 Edmonton St. was in police custody and being questioned Friday evening.

"The major crimes unit is investigating," said police spokesman Const. Jason Michalyshen.No charges had been laid as of Friday and he wouldn't identify the man being questioned.

"Joe has no recollection of this," said Manitoba Liberal party spokesman David Shorr. "He was interviewed by police and he actually thought he worked at the home. His mental state has deteriorated quite a bit."

Last fall, the Liberals said the McLeod case pointed to the need for governments to put more resources into the special needs of seniors with Alzheimer's.

Jashyn said two of her brothers went to the Public Safety Building on Friday afternoon, but by mid-evening they hadn't been allowed to see their father. She waited anxiously for word from them, and for an update on the victim's condition."It is very scary," Jashyn said.McLeod was arrested Sept. 7 and spent a month in the Winnipeg Remand Centre's medical unit after he pushed his wife Roseat their Transcona home. She received a cut that required stitches.
Rose McLeod said at the time she didn't want her husband of 48 years to be charged or to go to jail. Instead, she wanted him placed in a care home. But he couldn't get bail when his family said it was unable to provide him with the 24-hour care he needed, and they didn't have a personal care home lined up for him.

The Manitoba Liberals shone a light on his situation, and the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority assessed his condition a few days later. The WRHA found him a temporary bed in Parkview Place downtown, although his family was hoping to have him moved to a home in Transcona once a bed opened up.

He demonstrated aggressive behaviour but there was no way he could've been guarded around the clock at the care home, said Jashyn, noting there is a lack of facilities for some Manitoba seniors who suffer from conditions that can lead to aggression."You've got special homes for children. Why can't there be one for adults?" Jashyn said.

As of late Friday night, there was a possibility McLeod would be sent back to the medical unit at the remand centre."We are going to do our best," Const. Michalyshen said, adding "... whether we're dealing with an elderly person or anyone, to ensure their placement is the most appropriate with regard to their health and well-being."

The province's persons-in-care watchdog is looking into what happened at Parkview Place. The care home is run by Revera, a North American provider of accommodation, care and services for seniors.

"The Protection for Persons in Care Office has been notified," said WRHA spokeswoman Heidi Graham. The office receives and investigates reports of suspected abuse.

Graham wouldn't confirm the ages or the genders of the people involved in the incident, citing the Personal Health Information Act.

It was tough for McLeod's family to get much information, said Jashyn.Members of the man's family and the Liberals are holding a news conference today.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition March 26, 2011 B1
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Sunday, March 20, 2011

Alzheimer's in U.S. claims $202 bln in unpaid care - latimes.com

 Alzheimer's in U.S. claims $202 bln in unpaid care

Nearly 15 million Americans care for a dementia patient

* Disease takes devastating toll on families, friends

By Julie Steenhuysen

CHICAGO, March 15 (Reuters Life!) - Nearly 15 million
people in the United States take care of a loved one with
Alzheimer's disease or another form of dementia, amounting to
17 billion hours or more than $202 billion in unpaid care,
Alzheimer's experts said Tuesday.

If these caregivers all lived in one U.S. state, it would
be the nation's fifth largest, according to the Alzheimer's
Association's 2011 annual report on the disease.

The report illustrates the growing burden of Alzheimer's
disease, a fatal brain-wasting disease that erodes memory,
thinking, behavior and the ability to handle daily activities.

Alzheimer's affects more than 26 million people globally
and can stretch on for years, slowly robbing patients of their
mind and memories. And there are currently no drugs that can
keep the disease from progressing.

"Alzheimer's disease doesn't just affect those with it. It
invades families and the lives of everyone around them," Harry
Johns, president and chief executive of the Alzheimer's
Association, said in a statement.

The new report shows a 37 percent increase in Alzheimer's
and dementia caregivers compared with a year ago, but much of
that increase is because the year-ago figure had been based on
nine-year-old estimates, Beth Kallmyer of the Alzheimer's
Association said in a telephone interview.

Even so, the number of unpaid caregivers is staggering,
Bill Thies, the association's chief medical and scientific
officer said in a telephone interview.

'ONLY GOING TO GET WORSE'

"We are in the early stages of an epidemic and it is only
going to get worse over the next four years, and these costs
are going to continue to grow," Thies said.

The group estimates that 5.4 million people in the United
States are now living with Alzheimer's disease, up from 5.3
million a year ago. That includes 5.2 million people over age
65 or about one in eight senior citizens.

A 65-year-old person diagnosed with Alzheimer's typically
lives four to eight years after being diagnosed, but some
patients live as long as 20 years after diagnosis.

That takes an emotional toll, Kallmyer said.

"It's hard to take care of somebody that you love who
doesn't remember who you are."

Kallmyer said more than 60 percent of caregivers say they
are stressed, and more than a third say they are depressed.

Treating the disease is expensive.

The $202 billion in unpaid care is on top of the $183
billion estimate for Alzheimer's care expected to be delivered
in 2011 by healthcare workers in homes, hospitals and long-term
care facilities, an increase of $11 billion over a year ago.

Medicare and Medicaid, the federal insurance programs for
the elderly and poor, cover about 70 percent of these costs.

Thies said Alzheimer's patients on Medicare cost three
times more than other patients, largely because they spend more
time in hospitals and nursing homes. And Alzheimer's patients
on Medicaid, which pays for the bulk of long-term care, cost
nine times more than other Medicaid patients.

"The federal government is really paying for Alzheimer's
research one way or another because the bulk of these people
will be on Medicare or Medicaid," Thies said.

By 2050, Medicare costs for people with Alzheimer's
and other dementias will increase nearly 600 percent and
Medicaid costs will soar almost 400 percent.

The full report appears in the March 2011 issue of
Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's
Association.
(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Copyright © 2011, Reuters

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