5 Easy Ways to Manage Caregiver Stress

As we continue to develop our products, finding creative and useful ways to help caregivers is something we always consider with each new feature. At K4Connect, our goal is to help family and professional caregivers give their loved ones the best care possible.

 

 

By: Diana Gore

Product Manager, K4Connect 

November 4, 2018

Being a caregiver is not for the faint of heart, no matter the age of the care recipient.  As a mom of twins I experienced the reality of sheer exhaustion and the stress that comes with two babies.  And a few years later I discovered another level of stress that came with two toddlers and a new baby in our home.  Just as caring for young children adds a new dimension of stress to life, so does caring for an aging loved one. Luckily, there is a massive new wave of caregiving resources being developed as baby boomers age.

As a product manager at K4Connect, I work daily to understand how the technology we create can help improve the lives of seniors and those that care for them.  As a company we believe that tech can make the lives of seniors and those that care for them simpler, healthier and happier. Our first product, K4Community, includes communication tools that help families stay connected through voice, text and video chatting which can help provide caregivers peace of mind about their loved one.  In addition to improved communication, there are a bevy of low-cost (or free) tech tools that can help ease your mind and lift your spirits.

According to the 2015 National Alliance for Caregiving/AARP Caregiving in America report, about 34.2 million Americans provided unpaid care to an adult age 50 or older over a 12 month period.  Almost half of all family caregivers reported being “somewhat stressed” and more than a third reported being “highly stressed”meaning that if you’re experiencing this, you’re not alone!  Being the caregiver of an aging loved one can be rewarding but also comes with challenges, many of which can affect your own health.

Paid, professional caregivers are also not immune to the stress that comes from caregiving.  The PHI Workforce Data Center sites that in 2016 there were almost 4.5 million direct care workers providing hands on care in the United States. These paid caregivers often work long shifts and have physically, mentally and emotionally demanding roles.  The American Psychology Association’s 2014 Stress Statistics list job pressure as the number two cause of stress, just behind money.  Implementing ways to reduce stress for direct care workers can improve morale and job satisfaction.

Caregivers must care for themselves so they can in turn care for others.  Paid or unpaid, caregiving is a challenging role and finding ways to reduce stress is critical to maintaining the caregivers overall health.  Stress can be a constant companion when you are a caregiver but it doesn’t have to be.

Here are 5 ways to reduce caregiver stress:

1. Laugh

A good laugh can help relieve built up stress and improve your mood. By following sites like Reader’s Digest’s Funny Jokes on social media, you can get your daily dose of laughter just by scrolling Facebook. Here’s a sample of what you might see:

Why aren’t koalas actually bears?
  • They don’t meet the koalafications.
What does a pepper do when it’s angry?
  • It gets jalapeño face!
As a scarecrow, people say I’m outstanding in my field.
  • But hay, it’s in my jeans.

Laughter really can be a great medicine! A 2014 study conducted at Loma Linda University showed that humor can have clinical benefits and help support whole-person wellness.

The Mayo Clinic states that laughter has the following short-term health benefits:

Stimulate many organs. Laughter enhances your intake of oxygen-rich air, stimulates your heart, lungs and muscles, and increases the endorphins that are released by your brain:

Activate and relieve your stress response. A rollicking laugh fires up and then cools down your stress response, and it can increase your heart rate and blood pressure. The result? A good, relaxed feeling.

Soothe tension. Laughter can also stimulate circulation and aid muscle relaxation, both of which can help reduce some of the physical symptoms of stress. It’s hard to feel anxious or tense when you have a big smile on your face.

Read the comics, watch a comedy show, search for funny video clips online, call or text a friend who makes you laugh, download some of these funny apps or check out this site for some more good clean jokes!

2. Take a break

Grab a quick 5 minute walk, linger at the water fountain or sink and sip your water, scroll through some pictures on your phone or tablet, listen to one of your favorite songs, play with a pet, sit in your car an visualize yourself in a place that is peaceful or jump online and visit the Calm website or use the Calm free mobile app (available for both iPhone and Android for quick stress reduction.

Giving yourself a few minutes throughout your day to take a break and regroup will give you the boost you need to continue to stay focused and energized as a caregiver.

3. Practice Breathing Techniques

A highly effective way to relieve stress is to use focused breathing techniques that encourage slow, deep breaths.  You can start by simply taking a slow deep breath in through your nose and breathe out gradually through your mouth (try to make the exhale take twice as long as the inhale), repeat 3-4 times.  Other recommended breathing techniques that help reduce stress are belly breathing, 4-7-8 breathing and roll breathing.

There are now several free apps that help guide you through this. Check out these out:

4. Get Up and Move

Exercise releases endorphins, the natural chemicals produced in your body and brain that create a positive feeling in your body, often making you feel pleasure and satisfaction.  The positive feeling will leave you feeling less stressed and it doesn’t have to take a lot of time. John Ratey, MD, a Harvard Medical School professor and the author of Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain, says just two minutes of exercise is enough to change your mood if you raise your heart rate.  “Anything from squats to jumping jacks supplies a surge of neurotransmitters, such as norepinephrine, dopamine and serotonin – the same targets as antidepressants,” he says.

30 minutes of physical exercise a day is ideal but if you can’t fit 30 minutes straight into your day then break it into three 10 minute intervals.  Go on a walk, do some yard work, stretch, jog in place during commercial breaks of your favorite show. Take 10 minutes and do some simple exercises – 10 air squats, 10 jumping jacks, 10 standing push-ups, 10 calf raises and repeat.

Activity trackers can be a great way to motivate you to get up and move around, even when you might not feel like it.  It’s such an important part of overall well-being that K4Connect partnered with Garmin to provide fitness trackers to residents in communities using K4Community.  This provides them a way to keep track of their wellness and get out and move. You can start tracking your daily exercise and set goals for yourself using activity tracking wearables such as the Garmin Vivofit 3 that is used by K4Community members.

5. Gratitude

This can be a powerful means to combat stress because it reminds you to look for the positives.  There are good things in life regardless of how stressful or overwhelming things may seem. Making time to pause and acknowledge things you are grateful for will help shift your perspective and reduce your stress.  Not convinced about the importance of gratitude, here are 7 scientifically proven benefits of gratitude.

Here are some simple ways to inject gratitude into your day:

  • Keep a paper gratitude journal or check out these gratitude journal apps on iOS or Android.
  • Post quotes and images that remind you to be grateful around your house or workplace.
  • Surprise someone with an act of kindness.
  • Watch an inspiring video that will remind you of the good in the world.
  • Send someone a handwritten thank-you note or thank-you email or text.
  • Make a donation to an organization you are grateful for.

Unfortunately for caregivers, stress is an inevitable part of the job.  With some management and help from technology, there are many ways to help assist in this.  

At K4Connect, we don’t have all the answers, but our goal is to help family and professional caregivers use technology to stay cool, calm and collected.  As we continue to develop our products, finding creative and useful ways to help caregivers is something we always consider with each new feature.

How Smart Devices are Changing Lives for Seniors

Wearables and smart home devices are quickly on their way to becoming a “must-have” rather than a “nice-to-have” for older adults.  The info they can provide to users, users’ families and their doctors can potentially save a life or correct an issue before it becomes a real problem.

By: Kuldip Pabla

Senior Vice President of Engineering, K4Connect

November 1, 2018

Smart home devices and wearables are revolutionizing our world in many ways and will continue to do so – in fact the U.S. market for wearables is expected to grow to 51 billion by 2022. Wearables have gone beyond simple personal fitness devices for monitoring heart rates to those that can now monitor blood glucose levels or even help protect against skin cancer. Sophisticated AR/VR devices, such as Google Glasses, are allowing surgeons to float medical images in their field of view during operations.

Wearables are also transforming elderly care, which will be critical in the years to come. By 2030, older adults are projected to outnumber children for the first time in U.S. history, with nearly 1 in every 5 U.S. residents of retirement age. This increase in the aging population combined with the rise in chronic illness will have tremendous impact on the U.S. healthcare system. Cardiovascular problems, along with diabetes and obesity are problematic for older populations. These diseases may be attributed to lack of physical movement, unhealthy lifestyle, or even bad posture – which wearable devices can help.

Tech has an important role to play

Technologies, such as Artificial Intelligence (AI) and smart devices, can help us predict –and sometimes even prevent – certain illnesses and play an important part in preventative care. In addition, smart devices for the home can help seniors overcome day-to-day physical challenges due to age or disabilities, and remain independent.

Wearable devices have an important role to play in assisting the elderly, but have shortcomings as well. For example, while the concept and function of the neck pendant to detect falls is fantastic, older adults are less inclined to adopt it, as they don’t want to be stigmatized as needing help or needing to be watched over. For a wider adoption, wearable devices will need to address sentiments of a senior as much as the functionality. Like beautiful jewelry, technology must be able to be a seamless part of seniors’ lives.

We need to ask more of smart devices. These devices possess a plethora of rich data that can be leveraged to take preventative or corrective actions. With the help of these devices, we can monitor and observe a user’s physical activities and gather data not just about the number of steps taken, but how those steps were taken. Were they quick or slow? Devices should track a user’s trend in how speed and movement has changed over time. Has the user slowed, begun limping, or altered activity overall? Coupled with AI, these insights can help predict if a user is prone to a chronic disease or chronic pain in the short or long term. This information can also alert the user to visit their doctor for further help – before a problem gets worse. Since the data is collected over time, doctors will have access to richer information instead of diagnosing a patient at a given moment, which only tells a small part of the story.


Check out the full story on IoT Evolution Health News, here

About the author: Kuldip Pabla is the Senior Vice President of Engineering at K4Connect. He oversees the continued development of K4Community, the company’s solution designed specifically for, and with, the residents and staff of senior living communities worldwide, as well as the development of future solutions planned for the home.

Edited by Ken Briodagh

Fingerprint Sensor Pioneer Turns Sights to Senior Citizen Tech

K4Connect a Raleigh, NC-based provider of smart home and on-demand app integration for senior-living facilities, raised $12 million in new venture capital funding led by AXA Venture Partners.

By: Dan Primack

October 24, 2018

Why it matters: This is one of very few consumer tech startups aimed at America’s fastest-growing demographic, and it’s founded by the guy whose last company helped Apple enable TouchID.

“There’s a joke that San Francisco is the premiere assisted living community for millennials. You can sit there and have everything brought to you that you ever may need. We integrate technologies that have been targeted toward a younger demographic and make them work for older adults and people living with disabilities.” — K4Connect CEO Scott Moody via CNBC.


Read more from Axios, here

One of the Inventors of Apple’s Fingerprint Sensor is Now Making Tech Easier for Seniors

AXA Venture Partners and Intel Capital are among investors pouring $12 million in Series B funding into K4Connect. Based in Raleigh, North Carolina, K4Connect aims to make the best new technologies accessible to seniors and people living with disabilities.

By: Lora Kolodny

October 23, 2018

In 2012, “biometric authentication” sounded like science fiction — scan your fingerprint into a mobile phone to unlock it and access your digital wallet.

An entrepreneur named Scott Moody helped take biometrics mainstream. He sold his first company, AuthenTec, to Apple in 2012, enabling features like Touch ID and Apple Pay in iOS devices.

Now Moody is working to ensure that seniors won’t be left behind as new technologies take over the home, whether it’s smart devices or on-demand apps. His new company, K4Connect, brings the latest tech to senior communities, and makes it all easy to operate without the need for expensive IT teams.

“There’s a joke that San Francisco is the premiere assisted living community for millennials,” Moody said, in an interview. “You can sit there and have everything brought to you that you ever may need. We integrate technologies that have been targeted toward a younger demographic and make them work for older adults and people living with disabilities. We’re integrating the best in technology to improve their lives.”

K4Connect’s system employs edge-cloud architecture, which means that even if the Wi-Fi goes out at a given facility, residents can still use their smart ovens, televisions, lights and more. K4Connect is currently used by at least 13,000 residents in senior living communities from Florida to California.

AXA Venture Partners and Intel Capital are among investors who just poured $12 million in Series B funding into K4Connect, bringing the company’s total capital raised to $22 million.

Moody said that his Raleigh, North Carolina-based start-up will use the funding to expand to new senior and assisted living communities. K4Connect is constantly piloting new technologies, he said, including voice-controlled devices. Moody has an eye on autonomous shuttles and robotics that could help seniors and people with disabilities stay as mobile and socially connected as they desire.

“It’s not that older people don’t like tech,” he said. “They just don’t like tech that was made by a 25-year-old, with a large font slapped on it.”


Read more from CNBC, here

 

Masonic Villages Goes Big on Smart ‘IQ Homes’ for Aging in Place

The homes are designed to extend independence, and come with integrated communications technology from K4Connect, and aging-friendly adjustable access to things like countertops, cooking surfaces and bathroom appliances.

By: Tim Regan

October 4, 2018

A not-for-profit senior living provider is moving forward with a plan to open dozens of new town home-style independent living residences, each equipped with technological and design features meant to help older adults live in the setting longer.

Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania-based Masonic Villages is moving forward with a plan to build 58 new “IQ Home” dwellings at its communities in Sewickley and Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania. The nonprofit has five continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs) in the state, each offering a range of senior housing and care services. Its 2017, its operating revenue was $139.3 million, according to its latest financial statement.

“This idea, called aging in place, did have a great deal to do with our thinking in terms of developing the smart home,” Patrick Sampsell, chief environmental and facilities officer at Masonic Villages, told Senior Housing News. “This is both a consumer preference and also a direction in which government regulations seem to be pushing organizations like ours.”

The first “IQ Home” prototype — a collaboration between design firm RLPS and Masonic Villages — opened to residents at Elizabethtown earlier this year. The idea behind the project was that seniors need a full range of solutions, not just one or two flashy features, in order to better age in place.

“When you talk about smart homes, oftentimes people jump right to the tech and the gadgets,” RLPS Partner Daniel Godfrey told Senior Housing News. “For us, we realized that technology alone cannot support aging in place.”

To that end, the homes are designed to extend independence, and come with integrated communications technology from K4Connect, and aging-friendly adjustable access to things like countertops, cooking surfaces and bathroom appliances. The dwellings are also equipped with innovative design features like tankless water heaters, air filtration systems, motion sensors and even refrigerators that track whether they’ve been used recently — a potential indicator for if a resident needs help.


Read the full article on Senior Housing News, here!

The Cardinal at North Hills Adopts K4Connect’s Technology for its Senior Apartments

Raleigh startup K4Connect’s innovative Internet-of-Things technology is now being deployed close to home – at The Cardinal at North Hills, a new senior living community in the midtown section of Raleigh.

By: David Ranii

January 18, 2017

K4Connect announced Wednesday that The Cardinal has installed its K4Community technology, a software platform that seamlessly connects multiple devices regardless of the manufacturer or the wireless technology they use, in 225 residential apartments. It enables residents of senior living facilities, known as senior living communities, to remotely manage tasks such as managing their room temperature and turning lights off and on – as well as monitoring their health, receiving medication reminders and keeping on top of community events.

“K4 is really on the cutting edge of using technology to help” seniors as well as “individuals with mobility challenges,” said Tom Ford, executive director of The Cardinal. The Cardinal, which just opened on Friday, is one of 23 senior living communities in seven states owned by Kisco Senior Living of Carlsbad, Calif.

Technologies that compete with K4Community offer a piecemeal approach, while K4Community “brings it together in one package,” Ford said. In addition, he added, the technology can be adapted to accommodate other devices and other functions.


Read the full article on The News & Observer, here