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Stroke Home Care

Are You Caring For a Loved One Who
Suffered a Stroke?

For stroke survivors, returning home from the hospital or a rehab facility can be daunting.
The sudden loss of speech or mobility is tough to adapt to.

A Committed and Reliable Care Team
to support your loved one around the clock is essential.

We Offer Our Clients and Their Families

Five Elements of Effective Stroke Home Care

The Affinity Care Method for Stroke Recovery

Safe Surroundings

Safe Surroundings

The last thing a stroke survivor wants is to return to the hospital with a consussion or broken bones following to a nasty fall. Our caregivers will help your loved one navigate bathrooms and other risky areas of the home, and ensure they stay safe during the dizzy spells that often occur as a side effect of post-stroke medications.

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Healthy Diet

Recovering from a stroke and preventing another one requires dietary changes and proper hydration – which many survivors find difficult to stick to. Our caregivers are skilled at preparing healthy meals and tracking fluid and medication intake so your loved one can get the nutrients he or she needs on a consistent schedule.

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Physical Activity

To build their confidence and rebuild neural connections, stroke survivors need daily therapeutic exercise and encouragement. It’s the difference between full recovery and “learned non-use”. Our caregivers will help your loved one stick to their routine, keep track of progress, and stay motivated, focused, and safe.

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Cognitive Stimulation

Often the hardest part of recovery is the inability to communicate, which affects as many as 40% of survivors. To deal with this issue, our caregivers can help your loved one create a “communication board”, do speech therapy exercises, and stimulate cognitive recovery through mindfulness activities

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Social Engagement

Unable to engage in old hobbies and worried about embarrassing accidents, stroke survivors often withdraw – increasing the risk of depression and decreasing their odds of recovery. Our caregivers can help your loved one find and attend community activities and support groups, while offering friendly companionship at all times.

Our Caregivers and Office Staff Also Help With:

  • Meal preparation
  • Bathing and toileting
  • Dressing and grooming
  • Errands and shopping trips
  • Laundry and light housekeeping
  • Transport to doctor’s appointments
  • Dedicated staffing
  • Flexible scheduling
  • Competitive pricing
  • No long-term contracts
  • On-call service, day or night
  • 100% satisfaction guarantee

How to Care for the Stroke Survivor

When your loved one has a stroke, they’re in a hospital or rehabilitation center where many resources are available to help them get through their day. However, most people want to come home, and if you are the caregiver, you will be responsible for the day-to-day care of someone who has experienced a debilitating brain attack.

Depending on the severity of the stroke, your loved one may have partial or full paralysis of one side of their body, a diminished ability to talk, or difficulty with his or her mobility. Of course, this does not even take into account the emotional and psychological effects that a stroke has on a person’s outlook on life. As a stroke survivor’s primary caregiver, it is your job to assist with their physical and emotional needs while taking care of your own, as well.

Dealing with Paralysis and Spasticity.

Paralysis is one of the most common side effects of a stroke. You’ll commonly hear it referred to as hemiparesis, which means that the paralysis exists only on one side of the body. Depending on how bad the stroke was, your loved one may have some ability to use that side of the body or they may have no use of it at all. This will determine how much care your loved one will need in their activities of daily living. Your loved one may also experience spasticity, which is a constant clenching of the muscles that resists stretching. This will also determine how well they are able to get around.

Part of dealing with paralysis and spasticity is engaging in daily exercise.

  • – You will need to assist your loved one in daily range of motion exercises with their affected arm and leg. Range of motion exercises means that you gently move the affected limb through the extent that it is capable of moving.
  • – It is important to focus on moving the limb carefully and stretching the muscle, but not moving to the point of pain or extending the muscles beyond their limits. Your loved one will not have the same range of motion in their arm that you would have due to their condition.

Try to do range of motion exercises at least three times a day.

For limbs that are paralyzed, it is important to reposition them frequently throughout the day to prevent sores from forming. Since the limb does not have any feeling or the ability to move, your loved one will not be able to respond to any pain stimulus and cannot move the limb on their own to prevent a sore.

It is important to check at least once a day for sores on the paralyzed limbs and on their backside if your loved one is chair or bed bound.

Helping your Loved One with Daily Life

Helping with Mobility

Depending on the extent of your loved one’s stroke, mobility may often be a challenge. It is important to use any assistive devices that your loved one has been taught to use. Wheelchairs, walkers, and quad canes are essential in helping with mobility.

Another important mobility device is the ankle-foot orthosis or AFO. This is a device that fits over your loved one’s foot to keep the foot from dropping whenever they attempt to walk. It is essential that this device is worn inside the shoe to prevent foot drop and help prevent falls. Walkers and canes should be used as instructed by physical therapy staff.

Do not allow your loved one to use furniture or walls as walking aids as this is unsafe and can lead to falls. Falls are a big danger for stroke survivors, and can lead to further immobility and a worsening of their condition.

Around the house, make sure that there are no carpets that are loose or any other floor decorations that your loved one could trip over, such as runners. Go around your house and assure that there is clearance for your loved one’s walker or wheelchair to make it through different areas of the house.

There should be enough room for it to safely clear doorways, hallways, and other passageways between furniture. Wide-open spaces between furniture is better than small areas that would need negotiation. The bathroom is often a site of falls for stroke survivors. If possible, have handle rails installed in the shower and next to the toilet. Purchase an elevated toilet seat so that your loved one does not have to struggle to stand back up after using the commode. Remove any carpets that are on the floor of the bathroom, and purchase a tub seat for the bathtub for easy showering.

Bathroom Issues

  • One of the most difficult things for stroke survivors deal with is the lack of control regarding their bathroom habits. Urinary and bowel incontinence is an unfortunate side effect of stroke, but there are some steps you can take to help your loved one deal with this embarrassing side effect.
  • One strategy you can employ is to offer your loved one the option of using the bathroom every 2 to 3 hours, whether they need to go or not. Sometimes getting them on the schedule can help prevent accidents and avoid an embarrassing problem.
  • Your loved one may want to limit their fluids due to urinary incontinence, but this can lead to dehydration. Encourage them to drink during the day, but limit drinking during the night to avoid incontinence while sleeping.
  • Assure that your loved one has privacy and plenty of time to use the toilet when toileting is in progress.
  • Constipation is another issue that stroke survivors deal with. Although enemas and laxatives are often used, use some other strategies to help your loved one move their bowels. Assure that they always uses a sitting position when attempting to move their bowels. Laying down does not often result in a bowel movement. Eating a diet high in fiber, moving around during the day, and drinking enough fluids also help with constipation in the stroke survivor.

Communication and Emotions

Stroke survivors often suffer from aphasia or an inability to communicate. One of the ways you can help your loved one is to encourage them to be patient with themselves in trying to express their feelings to you. It may be frustrating for both of you, but the stroke survivor needs to understand that their thoughts and feelings are still valuable and are worth the time it takes to be understood.

Assist your loved one with props, picture books, or any other aides that help them communicate their feelings to you. Also, be sensitive for depression that is quite common in stroke survivors. If your loved one expresses feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, or wanting to die, you need to report this to his or her doctor immediately. These feelings are not normal and they can be treated with medication.

Getting Help

Caring for a loved one who is a stroke survivor is not an easy job. It takes love, patience, and understanding to deal with all the challenges that a stroke survivor resents.

It is important that you take care of yourself to take care of your loved one. If you are frustrated, angry, or irritable, your loved one will pick up on it, and it will affect them.

Getting help does not mean you failed. Getting help only means that you’re human. If you need a nurse or some other support aid to come into your house for a few hours a day, then you need to make the call, not only for you, but for your loved one, as well.

We provide a wide range of services and can assist you with whatever level of care you and your loved one need.

Affinity Home Care offers the finest quality cost-effective home health services
to patients and families. Caregivers and support teams work closely
with patients, their families, and physicians to ensure:

Personalized Care in Various Aspects of Daily Living

  • Domestic Duties

    • Meal Preparation
    • Light Housekeeping
    • Laundry & Linen Changes
    • Shopping & Errands
    • Driving to Appointments
  • Personal Care

    • Bathing & Dressing
    • Personal Grooming
    • Bathroom Assistance
    • Incontinent Care
  • Safety & Security

    • Ambulating Assistance
    • Wheelchair Transfers
    • Medication Supervision
    • Range of Motion Exercises

Affinity Brings Unrivaled Expertise in Senior Home Care
Enabling Your Loved Ones to Remain Independent and Happy in their Homes

ADL

Activities of Daily Living (ADL):

are fundamental and routine functions and activities that people tend to do every day without needing assistance.

  • Eating: Assistance with feeding of daily meals and snacks
  • Bathing: Washing and bathing assistance in a tub or shower
  • Toileting: Assistance to and from the toilet, and associated personal hygiene
  • Transferring: Assistance transferring to a bed, chair or wheelchair
  • Continence Care: Care for aging people with bowel and urinary incontinence
  • Dressing: Help with clothing, any necessary braces or artificial limbs
ADL

Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL):

are activities that enable an individual to live
independently in a community.

  • Errands and Shopping: Regular grocery and clothing shopping
  • Medication Reminders: Making sure your loved one takes medications as prescribed
  • Doctors Visits: Scheduling and arranging transportation to medical appointments
  • Light Housekeeping: Ensuring your loved one is living in a clean and safe environment
  • Meal Preparation: A caregiver can prepare a healthy and nutritious meal.
  • Use of Communication Devices: Assisting with use of telephone or other form of communication.

To enable seniors, the homebound, and the chronically disabled to
live independently in the safety and security of their own homes for as long as possible,

we also provide Hospice Support, Custodial Care, Joyful Companionship, Respite for Family
Caregivers, and other In-Home services.

For more information or to schedule a FREE In-Home consultation Call Us: