Your home is a toxic waste dump!

Written by Brenda Hoffman


Did you know thatrepparttar household and beauty products that you purchase at your local store are unhealthy for your family? You probably don't know this becauserepparttar 149239 chemical and manufacturing industries don't have to provide us with this information. Of course, many of these chemicals were originally intended to enhance our lifestyles. However, you really need to know that these "life-enhancing" products are actually polluting our health and environment. Your continued good health depends upon knowing this truth. This way you can limit your exposure to these toxic chemicals.

One ofrepparttar 149240 largest indoor pollutants that is found in our homes is formaldehyde which is found in antiperspirants, mouthwash, toothpaste, floor waxes, and furniture polishes and causes allergies, cancer, immune system failings, and asthma.

Another major indoor pollutant are phenols. This pollutant can be absorbed by both your lungs and your skin and result in caustic burns, kidney and liver damage and hyperactivity. Phenols are found in acne medications amd mouthwash.

Some other items that you need to be cautious of include Dawn Dishwashing Detergent which isrepparttar 149241 #1 cause of accidental poisoning inrepparttar 149242 USA, Tide which contains lye isrepparttar 149243 #1 polluter of our homes, and Off bug spray contains DEET which causes seizures. Other products to beware of include Lysol, Fantastik, Formula 409, Pine-Sol, Pledge, Spic & Span, Tilex, Ajax, Speed Stick, Secret, Johnson's, Joy, Windex, Palmolive, Shout, Spray & Wash, Palmolive, Lever, Irish Spring, Jergens, Crest, Listerine, Arm & Hammer, Colgate, Scope, Old English and Dove. As you can see, these are a lot of major brand cleaners and beauty products.

A Difficult Decision

Written by Paulette Kaufman


The decision to place a loved one in an assisted living facility is a difficult but frequently unavoidable one. Even thoughrepparttar choice may be absolutely necessary,repparttar 149145 person forced to makerepparttar 149146 decision for their spouse or parent often feels an overwhelming sense of guilt.

Whenrepparttar 149147 time came for me to decide to place my mother, who suffers from Parkinson’s disease, into assisted living, I knew as a nurse that it wasrepparttar 149148 best decision for both my mother and me. Allrepparttar 149149 same, I felt an enormous amount of guilt, and when I came home after helping my mother move into her new community; I broke down, sobbing.

Today I work as a marketing counselor forrepparttar 149150 facility where my mother lives – so I see her every day and know firsthand that she receives excellent care – yet there are still times when I fail to hold backrepparttar 149151 tears.

Many caretakers who decide to put their loved one in an assisted living facility think they have failed them somehow, even if they have already spent years caring for them and simply cannot do so any more. I had been taking care of my mother for three years before bringing her to live in a long-term care community, helping her with daily tasks and spending every other night at her house. I even managed to make it a family effort, with my son easing much ofrepparttar 149152 burden during his summers home from college. My mother did not want to leave her home, and I did all I could to see that she would not have to leave.

But eventually that time came. In a fall my mother broke her foot, but she hidrepparttar 149153 injury from me. A fall like my mother’s is especially worrisome because Parkinson’s is an incurable disease which progressively and inevitably gets worse. Patients are often able to minimizerepparttar 149154 ill effects ofrepparttar 149155 disease for a time, but eventually they will require frequent or constant assistance from a caregiver. My mother’s fall was a sure sign that she could no longer live on her own. When her doctor discovered that her foot was broken, he told her this in no uncertain terms. Now it became my responsibility to help her find a new home, and though part of me wanted to take care of her just as she had taken care of me as a child, I knew that I did not haverepparttar 149156 capability to care for her as her Parkinson’s progressed.

In some respects my mother and I have been fortunate, in that she was aware of her doctor’s instruction and conscious ofrepparttar 149157 reasons for entering an assisted living facility. Children and spouses of Alzheimer’s patients, onrepparttar 149158 other hand, must bearrepparttar 149159 full weight of responsibility when choosingrepparttar 149160 option of assisted living, though many spend months or even years denying this fact. Usually, when it comes time to seek out an assisted living facility for an Alzheimer’s patient, that patient has already reached an advanced stage ofrepparttar 149161 disease and likely exhibits a number of disturbing symptoms. Ifrepparttar 149162 caregiver has decided that it is time to consider assisted living,repparttar 149163 patient may already be in need of help with dressing, shaving, eating, and even usingrepparttar 149164 bathroom. Perhapsrepparttar 149165 patient has become delusional, convinced for instance thatrepparttar 149166 caregiver wishes to harm them. These are all common symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease, and, like Parkinson’s, such symptoms will only get progressively worse. Recognizing that a patient whose Alzheimer’s has reached such a stage and may need to enter an assisted living facility is positive. Unfortunately, I have met many people who think they can convince their parent or spouse of their need to enter an assisted living community, when in fact it is onlyrepparttar 149167 children or spouse of Alzheimer’s patients who can ultimately makerepparttar 149168 decision.

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