This 19-year-old has created an app to help her family manage her grandmother's dementia
"Knowing that you are not alone makes a big difference."
Dementia can be a devastating disease and the disease is often difficult not only on the person who lived there, but also on their family members. According toAlzheimer's association, in the United States, 16.3 million family members and friends with people with dementia have provided 18.5 billion hours of unpaid care to their loved ones in 2018. And that's like that of 19 years old.Logan Wellsfrom Lexington, Massachusetts, came with the idea ofCared for, an application that would facilitate the task for those who are loved by dementia taking care of it.
About six years ago, the 79-year-old grandmother, Nannie, started showingsymptoms of the disease. "The effect he had on my grandmother was terrible, but it was also very difficult for my parents and other family members," he saidBetter life.
Like herThe disease has progressed And she needed more and more round-foot care, they had more paid care involved, which is particularly complicated.
"It has become really difficult to stay on the same page, because we had to have several group cats," he said.
It was at this moment that the 15 year olds had the idea of the idea of neat.
His parents were "completely on board", "he said. "I learned coding and my father helped me create the prototype, then we contacted a father-sound duo to help us with development," he recalled.
Free application,which is available For Apple and Android users, allows people to create a profile centered on the individual withdementia and invite other people to join and receive notifications.
You can schedule events - like a visit or a birthday party - and confirm that you have completed a task, such as giving Nannie his medicine.
You can also create a message "Heads Up" that everyone will receive, like this, it's a little slippery or especially cold outside.
And you can connect to the personmood For the next caregiver to come and prepare if they feel grumpy or really disoriented. There is also a place to save how you spent your time together.
Basically, the objective of the application is to make it as simple as possible for all the caregivers involved to keep a trace of the person they love.
Wells currently attends a local community college, where he learns to manage aBusiness. Currently, he said the application is used by more than 600 families and he hopes will grow up.
"Our users have been perfect to give us comments so that we can adapt the application to their needs," he said. "The caregiver is a question so important for them because it's so personal for them, as for me."
The biggestadvice For relatives of people with dementia, it is not to follow the process of care alone.
"Find support groups and friends andfamily, whether in person or online, "he says." Knowing that you are not alone makes a big difference. "
For more to take care of someone with dementia, readTouching story behind a man's video with dementia remembers his own song.
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