Our Deals For March 2014

This March, 1 Assist Care of the Valley: Assisted Living At Home is offering two deals for you to choose from.

1 Assist Care of the Valley will take you to The Eastern Idaho Family History Conference for freeThe Eastern Idaho Family History Conference

Going from 9 until almost 5, 1 Assist Care of the Valley will provide you or a loved one with a ticket, provide transportation to the conference in Rexburg, and accompany you or them to any class you or they would like.

Does not matter if you are in Ashton or Driggs, we will take care of you.

Be sure to mention the Family History offer when you call to start services. You will need to start services by March 12th to enjoy this offer.

The Three International Tenors In Idaho Falls

The Three International TenorsYour second option is to enjoy two tickets to see the Three International Tenors in concert on March 25th in Idaho Falls. 1 Assist Care of the Valley will provide you with two tickets to enjoy the evening.

You need to start services by March 20th to enjoy this offer.

Call us today at 557-4215.

And of course, you can always ask us how veterans or their spouses may qualify for free or discounted assisted living care at home services.

Doing Family History in 1 Minute: How to Get Started With Family History Indexing in 3 Steps

Great news. FamilySearch has a new version of their indexing program.

Here are three simple steps to start indexing. Follow these three simple steps and in less than ten minutes, you will officially be ready to index.

Step 1: Know what indexing is.

Here is a quick video that explains what it is. It is less than two minutes.

Step 2: Register to be an indexer on FamilySearch.

Step 3. Download the software. You need a Windows or Apple based computer to do this. (If you have an iPad, you can download an app as well, but that is another post)

This super short video takes you through steps 2 and 3.

Finished the three steps?

Fantastic! Now you are all ready!

Stay tuned next week to learn how to start indexing. Make sure to subscribe to the blog and like us on facebook to get updates on family history tips. You can do both of those on the upper right of this web page.

1 Assist Care of the Valley Senior Care: Assisted Living At Home is a home care company located in Rexburg, Idaho. We provide assisted living services in the home to seniors in Idaho Falls, Rexburg, Driggs, Ashton, and everywhere in between. For some of our elderly clients, that includes doing family history with them.

We also provide weekly family history tips on our blog to help others with their family history work.

When Exercise Isn’t Enough – The One Thing That Will Increase Elderly Health By 50%

<a href=”http://www.valleyhelpathome.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Sitting-Senior.jpg”><img class=”alignleft  wp-image-480″ alt=”Helping Seniors To Walk In East Idaho” src=”http://www.valleyhelpathome.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Sitting-Senior.jpg” width=”379″ height=”216″ /></a>So it turns out that exercise is just not enough.  Not that the solution is terribly difficult, but in this case, <strong>knowing is way more than half of the battle</strong>.

<span style=”text-decoration: underline;”><strong><a href=”http://www.news-medical.net/news/20140220/Sedentary-behavior-may-be-a-risk-factor-for-disability-once-we-reach-our-60s.aspx” target=”_blank”>A recent study</a></strong></span> published in <i>Journal of Physical Activity and Health </i>found that <span style=”text-decoration: underline;”>the more time a senior spent sitting</span>, even if they spent time exercising, <span style=”text-decoration: underline;”>the more likely the senior’s health would lead to disability</span>.

The likelihood is pretty dramatic – to the tune of <strong>50% more per extra hour sitting</strong>.

Take this example. If two 70 year old men had similar health and exercise profiles, but one sat for 12 hours a day while the other sat for 13, the second man is 50% more likely to be disabled.

Does that mean sitting is dangerous?  What it means is that it is important to get up and move around.  If you want to watch TV, work on the computer, or play games, try to doing so while spending more time standing.  It might seem silly, but it is the difference between health and disability.

Looking for someone to help get you moving in one of Idaho Falls parks?  Wanting to find someone to go walking with your mother around the block in Rexburg?  Hoping you could just get someone to walk with your father in his house in Driggs?  Worried your loved one might be sitting too much at their cabin in Island Park? Wanting to give your wife a little extra walking time in the Ashton Living Center?  <em>1 Assist Care of the Valley: Assisted Living in the Home’s </em>care team members are more than happy to walk with our elderly clients.  Focusing on the emotional, social, and physical well-being of our clients, 1 Assist Care of the Valley’s team members follow care plans generated to help with that well-being while receiving assisted living care in their home.  That could mean a few hours a day or a few hours a week.

Give us a call at <strong>208-557-4215</strong> or fill out the information below to learn more or to <strong>schedule a free home visit</strong>.  We will then work with you to create a care plan to get moving and to help with your other objectives for your well being, or the well being of your loved one.

Two Simple Secrets Seniors Can Do To Be Twice As Healthy

Want to be twice as healthy as others your age?Two Ways Seniors Can Increase Their Health

Sweden has your answer*.

A study out from the Scandinavian country found that people aged 80 and older that did one of two things were twice as healthy as those their age in two years.

That is a lot of twos.

But what are those two things? They were:

  • Receive home visits from care workers
  • Attend senior group meetings

The other positive outcome of those who participated in the group meetings was that after a year they were less likely to rate their health as having deteriorated.

The results “amazed” Gerontologist Gwen Yeo, a former director of the Stanford School of Medicine Geriatric Education Center.

As seniors attended group meetings, they learned from their peers, which boosted their self esteem – as did seeing how others were able to age gracefully.

While Yeo said she did not see American health system providing these types of meetings, starting in April, 2014, 1 Assist Care of the Valley Senior Care: Assisted Living At Home In East Idaho will partner with Phoenix Media Enterprises of Rexburg and others to provide monthly group sessions for seniors and their families to gather together. The meetings will be two fold. First, to learn from other seniors and their support network on how to age gracefully. The second will be to learn from experts on how to prepare for and to know the options available to them when aging.

Essentially, these will be the types of meetings that the Swedish study has shown to help the health of the elderly.

Seniors that are less comfortable or unable to attend group meetings also have the option of using 1 Assist Care of the Valley to receive home visits and receive the same kind of care in their home as they would in an assisted living facility. 1 Assist Care of the Valley Senior Care of Rexburg sends caregivers into the homes of seniors living in Idaho Falls, Rexburg, Ashton, Driggs and between.

Yeo pointed out that home visits are becoming more commonplace in the U.S. as hospitals are working more closely with families to reduce trips to the emergency room and to reduce readmission rates, which hospitals can be penalized for.

Swedes live on average two years longer than those living in the United States. When it comes to life expectancy, the U.S. ranks 35th in the world while Sweden ranks tenth. Sweden’s elderly also have access to meals on wheels, help cleaning and shopping, personal-care assistance, transportation and home healthcare.

To find out more about assisted living care you can receive at home or about the monthly meetings starting in April, fill out your information below. Or you can call us at 557-4215.

* This information was originally reported by the Chicago Tribune.