Telemedicine and Dementia
Alzheimer’s Speaks Radio
with Roger Santos on Telemedicine
Today we have Roger Santos, a subject matter expert in the field of Telemedicine. The past 12 years, Roger has specifically worked with Telemedicine systems and applications for Hospitals, Clinics, and Rural communities. The  concentration of his work has been in applying telemedicine and interactive technology applications to Gerontology and memory care specifically. Radio Host, Lori La Bey, is looking forward to discuss with Roger the impact he feels telemedicine does and can have on dementia care.
Contact Information Roger Santos:
Email:Â Roger.Santos@NGCC5.comÂ
Phone:Â 916-730-1962
LinkedIn:Â https://www.linkedin.com/in/santos5/
Â
Dementia Cruise of Compassion & Camaraderie
https://youtu.be/XLNFPSEdf8I
We are honored by your response to our offering of the Dementia Friendly Symposium and Cruise and we are encouraging people to book their cabins before we are sold out!
For more details on the symposium and cruise go to https://alzheimersspeaks.com/cruise-with-us
Click here for the Symposium Program
Kathy Shoaf the travel agent handling the symposium and cruise can be reached at: 219-608-2002 or email her at Kathy.Shoaf@CruisePlanners.com
Click Below to Download the Tips
I Love This Company!
Arthur’s Residential Care has sponsored and supported the Memory Cafe Concept from the beginning I brought it to the United States. The minute I suggested they become involved in launching one they jumped with both feet in the water and have never looked back. ACR not only graciously gave us space for meetings, but provided treats and additional facilitators as our one group expanded to three. They have been so progressive in staff dementia training and creating moments of joy for both their residents and their families; which I must admit brings a smile to my face and a warmth to my heat every time. I am so blessed to witness their work. Kudos Arthur’s Residential Care!
Lori La Bey, founder of Alzheimer’s Speaks
Insights from Arthur’s – Here is One of Many Free Tips
Take The Survey
Help Define What “Quality” Means to You
Open To All In The U.S.
University of Minnesota PhD candidate Heather Davila describes a survey to get input from people age 55+ family members, and professionals who work in the field of aging services about which aspects of “quality” in aging services matter most.
To take the survey go here: www.tinyurl.com/Qagesurvey
Contact: Heather Davila,
Email:Â wood0132@umn.edu
Find a Memory Cafe & Get Resources
Read More to Get Resources
Push Research Forward. Join the A-List
An Important message from our friend Meryl Comer:
Only twice in my twenty plus years as an Alzheimer’s caregiver has a doctor ever asked whether I was doing okay. Yet my husband would have never made the clinic appointment on time if I had not gotten up extra early to bathe, dress, feed, manage his resistance and drive him there. Now here’s a chance to be heard!
Researchers from the Mayo Clinic want to learn what matters most to you when you go to the doctor with your loved one. They need volunteers for an online focus group who are current or former caregivers for a loved one with dementia.
Study participants will be asked to join an online focus group and answer several questions over a week and a half posted by the moderator. Participants can choose to remain anonymous. Their goal is to help healthcare providers better support and communicate with caregivers by learning:
- How health care providers can best help caregivers provide optimal care to loved ones while maintaining their own health.
- How involved caregivers want to be their loved ones’ healthcare.
- What the ideal “care team” looks like.
Please click here for more information about this important Mayo Clinic caregiver study.
Your opinions are critical to improving the experience for all caregivers when they accompany loved ones to doctor’s appointments. Let’s not miss this opportunity to make doctors tune into what matters to us.
Meryl Comer, A-List Team Member & 20-year Alzheimer’s care partner
One Reply to “Telemedicine and Dementia”