Monday, May 29, 2017

Memory Mobile


                           





Susan is a 55 year old mother of two, who was diagnosed about 2 years ago with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as ALS. She loves scrapbooking and playing cards with her friends and family. She struggles with muscle weakness and fatigue. People with ALS also struggle with hand- eye coordination.  This activity works on Susan's fine motor skills, her grip strength, and maintaining her hand-eye coordination, since ALS is a degenerative disease.  When asked how she thinks she has become stronger due to this activity, she said that she is now able to pick things up easier using her fingers, her hand-eye coordination has improved and that even more important to her she has something to leave behind for her family. When I asked about publishing this on the internet with her picture, she was very excited and hoped that our intervention could give someone else an idea that would help others! 





Step 1: Get a metal coffee can. The coffee can that we used was about 5 to 6 inches in diameter. The key to this step is to make sure that the size of the coffee can is appropriate for hanging things. If the can is too small you are not able to incorporate many strands hanging down.

Step 2: Get the ribbon that you are going to use to hang things on. The best length for the ribbon that we found was to between the same length of the can to 1.5 times the length.


Step 3: Determine and find the things that you want to have hanging down on the ribbons. Susan and I chose to use cards, seashells, and beads. Susan enjoys playing cards with her family and friends so we thought those would be a way that she could write notes to her family and incorporate those on her memory mobile. The seashells that she chose to use were some that she and her family found at the beach on their last family vacation.

Step 4: Choose the covering and the pictures to cover the coffee can. The pictures can be of whatever you want. Susan chose to do pictures of her family and her dog, Lola.

Step 5: Making use of the coffee can! I poked holes in the lid of the coffee can for Susan, since we needed to use an icepick to poke them. The next step was taking the background and pictures that Susan chose and gluing them to the coffee can. We decided that Susan would cut her pictures and apply the sparkle ribbons to make it more like a scrapbook page.

Step 6: The ribbons and accessories! Susan chose the sea shells and beads that she liked the most to use on her memory mobile. She said that she is the queen of her family so she made sure to incorporate the queen cards on the center strand. The other cards that she chose were the ace of hearts and ace of diamonds because they incorporated things she says to her children:
 that they are loved and more precious than diamonds. Before she glued the cards to the ribbons, Susan wrote a little note on two of them for her family. She then slid the beads onto the ribbon and glued the cards and seashells to it.

Step 7: We waited until the next therapy session to put the ribbons into the holes in the lid. I put the ribbons through the holes and Susan tore off the tape and taped the ends of the ribbons to the inside of the lid. Once that was done we were able to attach the lid to the coffee can and glue it into place so it didn't fall off.

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Ronald Reagan

Ronald Reagan was the 40th president from 1981-1989. Lauren backed up to when he was just in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease. Ronald was an optimist who always tried to see the glass as half full. He enjoyed acting, horseback riding, and working on his farm. He was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 1994. Things that he struggled with were getting a good night's rest, forgetting things, people's names and faces. More so than worrying about himself, he worried about the additional stress that he would be putting on his wife, Nancy. Part of the interventions that Lauren came up were sleep management, working with a memory board, possibly making him a video explaining things, and training and caregiving for Nancy. I really liked that she included the things dealing with his wife since she is going to be the one taking care of him.

Monday, May 22, 2017

TedTalk by Alanna Shaikh

I am doing my neuro note on the Tedtalk, done by Alanna Shaikh, How I'm Preparing to get Alzheimer's. Alanna started out telling about her dad and how he meant so much to her. He was a college professor, bilingual, her hero, and her mentor. Alanna points out that Alzheimer’s is hereditary and that since it is in her family she is likely to also get it. Alzheimer’s isn’t something that someone can really avoid getting but instead of dreading the future, Alanna is trying to prepare herself for dealing with Alzheimer’s. She says that she is working on improving three things in her life: her hobbies, exercising more, and being a better person. When she talks about changing her hobbies, she explains that while dealing with Alzheimer’s the things that you are able to do are the things that your hands know how to do- like knitting and drawing. Next she addresses exercising more. In this section, Alanna talks about improving her strength and balance so that when she gets weaker she has longer before she is unable to do things. Lastly she talks about being a better person, like her dad. She says that her dad was somebody that once he lost everything else, people wanted to be around him because of the love that he showed people. I think this is a very good way to look at things when it comes to dealing with knowing that you have an increased chance for something. I think this is a good video to watch for people going into OT because it embraces the whole person and what they can do to help somebody in the early stages of Alzheimer’s.  


Shaikh, A. (2012, June). How I'm Preparing to get Alzheimer's [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.ted.com/talks/alanna_shaikh_how_i_m_preparing_to_get_alzheimer_s#t-357019

Montel Williams

Montel Williams is a family man who is very active. Aside from being a family man, he is a tv host, radio voice, and an actor. Montel's symptoms started when he was in the military with pain behind his eyes. He deals with pain, fatigue and depression. He has actually tried to commit suicide twice due to the pain that he suffers with. As of right now, he is independent and still active. He seems very dedicated to staying active and in shape. He wants to be able to continue to be the husband, father, and provider that he is. I feel like Montel doesn't let his disability define him and like he is working to create a new way of viewing Multiple Sclerosis.

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Dr. Remy Hadley

Lauren did her case study on Dr. Remy Hadley from the TV show House. Huntington's disease is a genetic disease. Her mother and brother both had Huntington's disease, which her mother died from. She is a doctor, who was actually tested against her will. She likes working, gardening, and exercising. Dr. Hadley said that her main challenges are feeding herself, drinking without spilling her drink, typing out her documentation and coordination. Some of the adaptive equipment that Lauren suggested she use was weighted utensils, cups with lids and straws, and possibly an iPad with a speaking tool to help with documentation at work. Lauren also mentioned that moderate exercise would be useful as long as it did not cause further fatigue.


Tuesday, May 16, 2017

Tedtalk by Robin Morgan


For this neuro note I decided to listen to a Tedtalk. I listened to the video “4 Powerful Poems of Parkinson’s and Growing Older” by Robin Morgan. Robin Morgan herself was diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease 5 years ago. Once she was diagnosed she found out that women were often left out of medication trials and felt like it was her duty to help women have more of a presence in these trials. She read four of her poems in this video: “No Signs of Struggle,” “I’m Donating my Brain to Science,” “The Ghost Light,” and “This Dark Hour.” I am going to say a little bit about my favorite one of these- “No Signs of Struggle.” In this poem, she says “growing small requires enormity of will” and describes different things that a person with Parkinson’s deals with such as being the “new kid on the block” when in a room with others with Parkinson’s disease and the “irritating help from those who love you.” Since my Poppa had Parkinson’s I have wondered what it is like to have it and what goes through the person’s mind. I never thought about the person with Parkinson’s being irritated by their family all trying to help but I can understand it. I know my family was always helping my Poppa and I am sure some of it annoyed him or bugged him since he was not able to do it on his own. I also never thought about how it would be to go into a room where you know that everybody else in the room has gone through the same thing. I imagine it would be very hard to look at people further into their Parkinson’s journey than you and realize that is where you will be in time. It would be like looking into a glass ball to see your future. When she said that “growing small requires enormity of will,” at first it didn’t make sense to me but the more that I thought about it the more sense it made. It takes will power to know that you are going to grow small and become “less” than you are now. I think it would be so easy to give up and not have the will to push yourself forward when you know what your future holds. I enjoyed this Tedtalk and liked how it was first-hand experience about what a person thinks going through Parkinson’s Disease.




Morgan, R. (2015, May). 4 Powerful Poems about Parkinson’s and Growing Older [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.ted.com/talks/robin_morgan_4_powerful_poems_about_parkinson_s_and_growing_older?utm_source=tedcomshare&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=tedspread