Tag: family

Brain Health Made Simple: Live Q&A for You and Your Family

When should you be concerned about memory changes? And what steps can you take today to protect your brain health or support a loved one?

Join UsAgainstAlzheimer’s for a live, interactive LinkedIn event during Alzheimer’s & Brain Health Awareness Month. This session brings together experts in brain health, care navigation, and community engagement to answer your most pressing questions in real time.

This isn’t a lecture—it’s a conversation. You’ll hear practical, easy-to-understand guidance on:
• What to know about brain health and aging
• How to navigate care and next steps after concern arises
• How culture, trust, and community shape access to support
• Where to turn for help—and what resources are available right now

We’ll also introduce the Brain Health Journey tool, a simple resource to help you take your next step after the session. Come with questions. Leave with clarity.

Safety First: Understanding and Responding to Dementia Behaviors

Catholic Charities Hawaii (CCH) is offering another Zoom workshop focusing on Dementia-Related Behaviors that can be challenging for caregivers and providers of persons living with dementia in the community. This session will target unpaid caregivers of persons living with dementia in the community and the service providers, friends & family, neighbors, educators, and advocates who support them. These workshops are made possible by a grant given to Catholic Charities Hawaii from the U.S. Administration for Community Living/DHHS for the Alzheimer’s Disease Programs Initiative awarded to organizations across the country to increase resources and information to improve the well-being of persons living with dementia in the community and their caregivers. 

The workshop will cover:

    • Benefits of working as a team with healthcare and community resources through all stages of dementia
    • Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of dementia and why safety comes first
    • What the caregiver can do to help increase safety at home for their person living with dementia
    • Fall prevention and dementia, assessing and modifying the environment
    • Wandering issues: tips for environmental changes, safety in and out of the home
    • Dining and Safety: being prepared for possible swallowing difficulties and nutrition/hydration challenges
    • Alzheimer’s Association, Hawaii Chapter statewide resources, programs and education 

Expert Panel Presenters:

Jessica Barry, MD has been working at The Queen’s Medical Center Geriatric Services for 15 years. Born and raised in Kansas, she attended University of Kansas for undergraduate and medical school. Her Internal Medicine Residency was at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. Her Geriatric Fellowship was with University of Hawaii John A. Burns School of Medicine. She aims to keep her older patients independent as long as possible while maintaining an optimal quality of life with proactive prevention, early diagnosis, and targeted treatment. She and her husband from Hawaii have two children. She is passionate about dementia education for lay persons and health professionals. In her free time, she ferries the children to their activities and squeezes in running and reading novels.

Ivy K. Castallanos is the Director of Programs with the Alzheimer’s Association, Hawaii Chapter. She holds a Master’s degree in Behavioral Science and Health Education from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and has more than 20 years’ experience in the combined areas of health education, health promotion and disease prevention, health equity, and corporate wellness. She has served in roles with organizations such as HMSA, the American Heart Association, and HealthAssist, and has held research positions with the Johns Hopkins Center for Cancer Pain Research and the Welch Center for Prevention, Epidemiology, and Clinical Research in Baltimore, Maryland. Ivy joined the Alzheimer’s Association in 2014 and finds joy in empowering families affected by dementia. She is a full-time mom of two and a full-time caregiver for her mother.

Transform end-of-life care with deep listening

Discover evidence-based counseling techniques that help social workers, chaplains, and care teams manage trauma, de-escalate crisis moments, and bring calm to high-stress hospice and palliative settings. Join Gary Gardia for a powerful 90-minute webinar merging mindfulness, compassion, and clinical skills to strengthen patient and family support.

 

AFTER THIS WEBINAR YOU’LL BE ABLE TO:

  • Define counseling in end-of-life care
  • Explain mindfulness and deep listening frameworks
  • Identify two mindfulness techniques for de-escalation
  • Recognize two high-risk situations requiring both interventions
  • Describe two scenarios applying these techniques to traumatic stress

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