Why Start an OASIS in your Community

A Population at Risk

from the Getwell Newsletter

Approximately 44 million Americans aged 18 and older give unpaid assistance. They help older adults and individuals with disabilities living in the community. The estimated annual value of this unpaid work is immense. It is nearly twice the total costs of home health care and nursing home care.1

Furthermore, most caregivers are not adequately prepared for their role and often offer care with little or no support. More than one-third continue to give intense care even when they are in poor health. Studies show that family caregiver’s physical health strongly influences their decision. They may move a relative into a long-term care facility based on their health.

Research shows that family members who care for people with chronic or disabling conditions face their own risks. They confront these risks besides other challenges. Complex care giving situations can lead to emotional, mental, and physical health problems for caregivers. Caring for a family member is often very demanding, and caregivers’ health can suffer as a result. When this happens, the person who is ill may lose the support and presence of their loved one.

Most people prefer to stay at home in familiar surroundings despite these difficulties. They especially prefer this when they can do so with support from independent senior living options. 

Many have already found some approaches. Larger towns had funds to expand their Senior Center into attractive new facilities offering an array of services. Others have created Communities Without Walls. Village to Villages offers a volunteer-based organization. It addresses transportation and other home repair needs. Another body of research has led to the idea of OASIS. Small cultural and social centers where people can gather and enjoy lectures, activities and companionship. Dr. Asselin and her team have researched an approach that would make this possible. Offering training to organizers to create an OASIS in their communities. 

Resources

New Faces of the Future, by GetWell Education

Family Caregiver Alliance in cooperation with California?s Caregiver Resource Center and reviewed by Moira Fordyce, MD, MB, ChB.

Flowering Your Mind

Flowering Your Mind

With its many four-season benefits, lovely Cape Cod attracts many retirees looking to enjoy their later years in a peaceful, low-pressure, and supportive environment. Sadly, moving to a great retirement location does not prevent the challenges of cognitive decline that many will experience in the last years of their life. 

How does one witness their loved one’s cognitive decline and provide the care and positive experiences needed?  

On August 10th, 2021, at 3 PM, Oasis Brewster gathered Cape Cod Residents and Visitors for a special event featuring: Author Suzan Faith at Sea Captain Foster Homestead in the Heritage Barn.

Ms. Faith spoke about enriching the mind while combating anxiety. She developed her theory through a long experience as a registered psychiatric nurse and her love of a Japanese art called Oshibana. Oshibana is the art of using pressed flowers and other botanical materials to create an entire picture from these natural elements. Samurai warriors in Japan were said to have  made ‘Oshibana’ one of their disciplines to promote patience, harmony with nature, and powers of concentration.

An expert in dementia care, Suzanne Faith has helped thousands of families deal with the challenges of dementia and developed numerous curriculum on the topic for healthcare professionals. She currently manages Cape Cod Healthcare’s Dementia and Alzheimer’s Caregiver Support Program. The intersection of creativity and the brain is just one of the concepts she writes about. “Flowers have long been known to heal the spirit in many ways,” says the author, “remarkably, it is now evident that the brain’s response to the beauty and colors of flowers provides another powerful gift.” She is an award-winning pressed floral artist and illustrator; her unique designs combine pen & ink illustrations with flowers grown in her garden on Cape Cod. Well-traveled and respected for her art both in her career as an RN and in Oshibana Art, her book “Flowering Your Mind” is sure to excite challenge and promote healthier aging. 

View the Video in full or in parts Part 1 Part 2 Part 3

You may purchase the book.

Full Press Release