Your Retirement Living Connection
Increased vigilance could improve retirement living security in Arizona |
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| Wednesday, 29 July 2009 18:04 |
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Advice from local law enforcement could improve home safety for retirement living community residents in Arizona after a few incidents of theft were reported. Three recent cases have occurred when teams of alleged thieves allegedly passed themselves off as landscape crews to gain access to homes, police told the Associ ated Press.While one person reportedly acted as a lookout, officers told the wire service that others allegedly took valuables from homes in Mesa and Tempe. Public safety officials in both cities recommend that elderly people ask strangers to remain outside, even if they say they are from a recognized company, according to the East Valley Tribune. Verifying the identities of workers by contacting corporate offices and keeping windows and doors locked could limit the possibility of losing one's valuables, policemen advised the newspaper. © Copyright |
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Age Concern says that reports over the past five years have demonstrated a continuous increase in the price of heating older people's homes, with the less affluent spending 40 percent of their income on food and fuel, after housing costs.
"Shockingly the report finds that while poorer pensioners are spending more of their available income on energy they are - at the same time - reducing the amount of energy they buy," said Andrew Harrop, Age Concern head of public policy.
Read more...
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They say that the ability of the tile to cushion seniors who fall will lessen the number of hospital stays and medical costs associated with the elderly, including bone fractures.
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Read more...
A new floor tile may improve the outcomes of unstable seniors who fall by transitioning from a rigid surface to a more pliable one during sudden impacts, according to Sorbashock officials.
They say that the ability of the tile to cushion seniors who fall will lessen the number of hospital stays and medical costs associated with the elderly, including bone fractures.
More specifically, "the benefit of the technology is that it retains its solid feel and remains stable during normal activities," said Sorbashock president Sam Simonson.
Read more...
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Mobility problems and other concerns for men who are in retirement living communities tend to be downplayed because of societal roles taught early on, according to researchers at the University of Cincinnati and the Medical University of South Carolina.
"We see many elderly men needing the most help but they are the last to ask for it," says Peter Ross, CEO and founder of home care provider Senior Helpers.
Read more...
Mobility problems and other concerns for men who are in retirement living communities tend to be downplayed because of societal roles taught early on, according to researchers at the University of Cincinnati and the Medical University of South Carolina.
"We see many elderly men needing the most help but they are the last to ask for it," says Peter Ross, CEO and founder of home care provider Senior Helpers.
Read more...

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