Alzheimer's support


Establishing Your Own Alzheimer’s Support Group

Mike Jerry



Introduction
If you can't locate one near you, it's a good idea to start your own Alzheimer's support group. For caregivers who are watching their loved ones battle the brain disease everyday, reaching out and finding help can be a great stress reliever. To establish your own group, first decide what your goals are. You may want to have the group provide information about Alzheimer's or you may want to raise funds for the Alzheimer's foundation. Next, raise awareness of the group and seek out members through a publicity campaign. Finally, make plans and establish a structure for the group. Even though launching such an endeavor requires a lot of work, it will be very valuable and meaningful to many people.


Seeking an Alzheimer’s support group is essential for your health and emotional well being as a reliable caregiver of the patient. The stress of living with and caring for a family member who has a terminal brain disorder can be emotionally debilitating and depressing. By joining or creating a support group, you can share common concerns, problems, and solutions. As the caregiver, you will benefit from the emotional, as well as practical support the members of the group give to you.

The side effects you will experience in your personal life if you do not seek out an Alzheimer’s support group include: lack of sleep, weight loss due to a lack of appetite, decreased socialization or exercise, as well as depression.

If there are no existing Alzheimer’s support groups in your community, do not despair, simply put your energies into establishing one. Here are some questions you can ask when fleshing out the structure of an Alzheimer’s support group.

Aims and Purposes

What are the primary and secondary aims and purposes of an Alzheimer’s support group? Is it to provide education and solutions for family members who care for their parents, or is it to raise awareness and funds about Alzheimer’s disease? Have informal meetings with other families who are in the same situation, and talk to them about the viability of having a support group.

Awareness and Recruitment

In creating informational materials about the Alzheimer’s support group, do not forget to have a contact number and the name of the person who can answer queries.

How do you propose to create awareness and recruit members for your Alzheimer’s support group? Should you create press releases and distribute these to your community newspapers? Can you post flier invitations at the churches, libraries, and senior center bulletin boards? Can you compose public service announcements about the purposes of the group and send them to television and radio talk shows?

Structure, Plans, and Group Mechanics

Where will the group meet? How often and when should the group meet? How will the Alzheimer’s support group function to meet the expectations of the members?

What are viable short term and long term goals, which your support group can meet to help the needs of their members and the community?

Creating an Alzheimer’s support group from scratch is a challenge, but the benefits are invaluable. By establishing an Alzheimer’s support group, you will be with like-minded individuals who can help you solve problems and be there for you as you deal with the grief and pain. You

More Alzheimers Caregiver Information:

Ways to Prevent Alzheimer’s Disease
How Doctors Arrive at an Alzheimer’s Diagnosis
How to Tell Children Info on Alzheimer’s Disease
The Top Sign of Alzheimer’s Disease
Alzheimer’s Test: The Key to Detecting the Disease Early