Adult Protective Services — What They Do and How They Help
Adult Protective Services is the agency that investigates suspected abuse, neglect, and exploitation of vulnerable adults.
Adult Protective Services is the agency that investigates suspected abuse, neglect, and exploitation of vulnerable adults.
Most adult children know they need to talk to their aging parent about healthcare wishes, finances, and living arrangements, and most keep putting it off.
Every state in the U.S. has laws that protect and support family caregivers, from job-protected leave to tax credits and respite care funding.
Palliative care and hospice both focus on comfort, but they are different services for different stages of illness.
Medical records are written in shorthand that makes perfect sense to clinicians and almost none to families reading discharge papers at the kitchen table.
Insurance paperwork uses precise language that makes perfect sense to the industry and almost none to everyone else.
The average adult over 65 takes four or more prescription medications daily, according to the CDC, and nearly 40 percent take five or more.
Medicare has hard deadlines, and missing them costs real money, sometimes permanently. According to CMS, approximately 750,000 Medicare beneficiaries pay late enrollment penalties on their Part B premiums every year...
When a crisis hits, you need the right phone number immediately, not a search engine and five minutes of scrolling.
Every state has a network of agencies whose entire job is helping families like yours find care, report problems, and access benefits for aging parents.
The moment you start dealing with doctors, insurance companies, and care facilities on behalf of an aging parent, you enter a world with its own language.
At some point, you'll need legal documents. Your parent will be in a hospital unable to make decisions. Doctors will ask who has authority. Bills will need to be paid while your parent is incapacitated.