Meet our new board members – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home

Meet our new board members – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Homewww.OptimumSeniorCare.com

We are pleased to announce the addition of three new members to the Alzheimer’s Association Illinois Chapter Board of Directors. We welcome and thank Aimee M. Nolan, Daniel M. Gill and Sandy Prabhakar for their commitment to our mission.

Meet our new board members

We are pleased to announce the addition of three new members to the Alzheimer’s Association Illinois Chapter Board of Directors. We welcome and thank Aimee M. Nolan, Daniel M. Gill and Sandy Prabhakar for their commitment to our mission.

Aimee M. NolanDaniel M. GillSandy PrabhakarAimee is the Associate General Counsel and Chief Intellectual Property Counsel for W.W. Grainger, Inc. She is responsible for all aspects of Grainger’s IP portfolio, including patents, trademarks, copyrights and domain names. She also supports the company’s Enterprise Systems organization, as well as eCommerce and innovation initiatives. She is a leader of Grainger’s enterprise wide efforts on data protection, data security, privacy and breach response. She also counsels in the areas of marketing, advertising, M&A, International product sourcing and corporate communications.

She is passionate about serving the mission of the Alzheimer’s Association because her mother died at the age of 62 from early onset Alzheimer’s. Her mother and father were divorced prior to her illness, and her mother’s caregiver was her grandmother – who subsequently passed away only 10 days after her mother’s death.

Aimee is relatively new to volunteering with the Alzheimer’s Association. She served as a member of the Illinois Women and Alzheimer’s initiative Task Force and is currently chairing the Illinois Women United Against Alzheimer’s (IWUAA) movement.

She joined the board of the Alzheimer’s Association Illinois Chapter on July 1, 2017 and is also a member of the American Red Cross Tiffany circle Society for Women’s Leadership.

Alzheimer’s caregiving is taxing, but you may be eligible for savings – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home

Alzheimer’s caregiving is taxing, but you may be eligible for savings – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Homewww.OptimumSeniorCare.com

As a caregiver for someone living with Alzheimer’s, you likely pay for some care costs out of your pocket. You may qualify for tax benefits; tax rules are complex, so be sure to talk to your financial adviser or accountant before filing your returns.

As a caregiver, you likely pay for some care costs out-of-pocket. Because of this, you may qualify for tax benefits from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Tax rules are complex and can change. Be sure to get advice from your tax adviser or accountant before filing your returns.

Medical expenses

The person with dementia may be considered your dependent for tax purposes. If so, you may be allowed to itemize his or her medical costs. Generally, you can deduct only the amount of your medical and dental expenses that is more than 10 percent of your adjusted gross income. But if either you or your spouse was born before January 2, 1952, you can deduct the amount of your medical and dental expenses that is more than 7.5 percent of your adjusted gross income. Only expenses that have not been reimbursed by insurance can be counted toward the medical expense deduction.

See IRS Publication 502: Medical and Dental Expenses, for a complete list of allowable expenses.
Here’s a brief list:

  • Medical fees from doctors, laboratories, assisted living residences, home health care and hospitals
  • Cost of prescription drugs
  • Cost of transportation to receive medical care
  • Home modifications costs such as grab bars and handrails
  • Personal care items, such as disposable briefs and food

See IRS Publication 501: Exemptions, Standard Deductions and Filing Information to learn more about claiming the person with dementia as a dependent.

Child and Dependent Care Credit

If you paid someone to care for the person with dementia so you could work or look for work, you may be able to claim the “Child and Dependent Care Credit” on your federal income tax return. If eligible, you would be allowed a credit of up to 35 percent of your qualifying expenses, depending upon your adjusted gross income.

To qualify:

  • You must have earned income
  • The person with dementia must be unable to physically or mentally care for him or herself
  • The person with dementia must be claimed as a dependent on your tax return

See IRS Publication 503: Child and Dependent Care Expenses for more information.  

TIP: If you pay someone to come to your home and care for the person with dementia, you may be a household employer and may have to withhold and pay Social Security and Medicare tax and pay federal unemployment tax. See IRS Publication 926: Household Employer’s Tax Guide.

Sign up for our weekly e-newsletter

Be prepared for the changes Alzheimer’s brings. Sign up for our enewsletter to receive coping strategies and planning tips. Also be alerted to new programs or resources that may help families living with Alzheimer’s. Subscribe now.

Back to top

Flexible spending account

If the person with dementia is a dependent under the tax rules, you might be able to use your own workplace flexible spending account (FSA). This money can cover the person’s out-of-pocket medical costs or dependent care expenses in some cases.

State tax credits

Many states have additional tax deductions or tax credits to provide financial relief to caregivers. These tax programs build on the federal tax credit, which reduces the amount of income taxes a family owes. Each state program differs by name and eligibility requirements.

Help Is Available

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) offers free tax forms and publications explaining various tax deductions and credits.

AARP’s Tax-Aide program provides free tax preparation and counseling information to all low and middle-income taxpayers, even if you are not an AARP member.

Note: This information is not intended as tax advice. The determination of how tax laws affect a taxpayer depends on the taxpayer’s situation. A taxpayer may be affected by exceptions to the general rules and by other laws not discussed here. Therefore, taxpayers are encouraged to seek advice from a competent tax professional.

Bookmark this page | Email | Print

Top Resources

We’re counting on you. – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home

We’re counting on you. – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home – www.OptimumSeniorCare.com

I don’t make this request of everyone, and I don’t make it lightly.
Zoltan, you know the fight against Alzheimer’s disease is urgent. You understand that this terrible disease claims more lives than breast cancer and prostate cancer combined. And you know the Alzheimer’s Association must work steadily to provide care and support services and advance critical research every single month.
That’s why I’m inviting you to join a very special group of people who’ve made an exceptional personal commitment to this fight. Become a monthly donor today during our 2018 Drive for Monthly Donors, and you’ll ensure that critical programs get the strong and steady support they need month after month.
You’ll find that monthly giving is easy, efficient and powerful. And you’ll gain the satisfaction of knowing that your monthly commitment is ALWAYS working to make a difference.
Zoltan, this is your opportunity to join our community and start making a positive impact in the fight to end Alzheimer’s. But our 2018 Drive for Monthly Donors ends soon. Why not make this the year you decided to help lead the way to the first survivor of Alzheimer’s?
We’re counting on your generous support of our mission to eliminate Alzheimer’s disease through the advancement of research; to provide and enhance care and support for all affected; and to reduce the risk of dementia through the promotion of brain health.
And when you sign up to be a monthly donor today, you’ll receive an Alzheimer’s Association tote bag as our sincere thank-you for your commitment to the cause. As you use it, I hope you’ll feel pride in the powerful difference you’re making each month in the fight against this disease.

Achieve your New Year’s resolution with ALZ Stars – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home Caregivers

Achieve your New Year’s resolution with ALZ Stars – Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home Caregiverswww.OptimumSeniorCare.com

If doing healthy activities or giving back to the community is your New Year’s resolution, we have a way you can do both. Challenge yourself to change the course of Alzheimer’s disease by joining our ALZ Stars team and running the 2018 Bank of America Shamrock Shuffle or the 2018 Bank of America Chicago Marathon.

Make Your Miles Matter!

Go the distance with ALZ Stars! We’re making moves to end Alzheimer’s Disease one step at a time while we raise awareness and funds to benefit the research, care and support of the Alzheimer’s Association. When you join ALZ Stars, you’ll become part of a team that is passionate about finding a cure and making a difference in the lives of Alzheimer’s patients and their caretakers. You’ll also receive benefits such as fundraising and training support, opportunities for group runs and social activities, event apparel, fundraising incentives and event weekend activities. Most importantly, there is no better benefit than the camaraderie of a team that is striving for the same vision – a world without Alzheimer’s.

Podcast hopes to help people living with younger-onset Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home Caregivers

Podcast hopes to help people living with younger-onset Alzheimer’s – Optimum Senior Care – Chicago In Home Caregiverswww.OptimumSeniorCare.com

More than 200,000 Americans live with younger-onset Alzheimer’s, with symptoms developing in their 40s and 50s. Younger-onset Alzheimer’s can put an unexpected strain on relationships and finances; one couple living with the disease created a podcast to help others cope.

When Bella Doolittle heard her diagnosis of early-onset Alzheimer’s last February, she sat in the car outside the doctor’s office and cried. “He said, ‘Well, we figured out what’s going on with you and this is it.’ And I’m like, ‘No, it’s not.’ ”

Doolittle’s husband, Will Doolittle, sits next to her on the couch, recalling how she grilled the doctor. “You asked, ‘How long does this take? How long do I have?’ And he said, ‘On average, eight years.’ That really upset you.”

“That really pissed me off,” Bella says, laughing now at the memory. “Absolutely. I mean, I was pretty devastated. I’m like, eight years? I’m not even wrinkly yet.”

Researchers say as many as 200,000 Americans experience Alzheimer’s younger than the typical age of 65, developing dementia-like symptoms in their 40s and 50s.

For people like Bella, the diagnosis can feel overwhelming and bring feelings of shame. They fear losing memories, careers, and parts of their identity.

Bella is a young-looking 59, wearing a T-shirt and a mop of red hair. On the day NPR visited her home in Glens Falls in upstate New York, where the couple raised four kids, Bella was in the kitchen making her signature Christmas gift. “It’s homemade Kahlúa, the best you will ever drink,” she says. “I have my vanilla beans imported from Madagascar.”

Bella Doolittle remembers how she first became aware that something was wrong. For a while before the diagnosis, she just felt “off.” Her brain would get fuzzy and then it got worse.

Inside Alzheimer’s: A Series On Living With The Disease

“I got lost a couple of times in neighborhoods that I’m familiar with,” she recalls. “It was dark but I thought to myself, that should not have put me out there,” Bella recalls.

After that, the Doolittles started traveling to Albany, about an hour away, for test after test. Her neurologist finally named what Bella has taken to calling “the dreaded disease.”

She and Will, a local newspaper columnist, decided that they would talk and write publicly about her illness to break down some of the stigma of Alzheimer’s. Bella wanted to show that she can be productive and hold onto the best parts of herself, at least for awhile.

The Doolittles launched a podcast together called Alzheimer’s Chronicles. In their first broadcast in November, Will laid out the challenges that younger families experience with Alzheimer’s.

“We’re facing a lot of practical questions about finances and wills and whether Bella will keep working or retire,” he says in the first episode of the podcast. “And we’re facing personal questions as our relationship is challenged by this. And as we react to the changes it brings.” After a pause, he adds, “It’s a journey.”

Bella says the decision to talk publicly about her illness wasn’t hard. “I don’t feel like it’s something that’s like some bad secret; it’s not something I brought on myself. But I know that a lot of people who have this are afraid for other people to know.”

One of the hardest parts of the Doolittles’ journey is the uncertainty. Other doctors have told Bella that that eight-year timeline isn’t certain at all. There’s a lot of variation in the way this disease progresses.

But for Bella and Will, things are already moving frighteningly fast. In the first podcast, they debate whether she needs to leave her job at a local community college.

A month later, the decision’s been made, and we hear she’s not happy. “It’s not my condition’s fault,” Bella says during the third broadcast. “Society isn’t ready yet to acknowledge that just because you’re not perfect, you’re not as useful.” She says she’s convinced, with a little help and support, she could have kept working.

But as she talks about her future, Bella gets confused and loses the timeline.

“I stayed for a couple more years and I recently retired,” she says.

Will leans forward and says gently, “You didn’t stay for a couple more years, you stayed for 10 more months.”

“That was a couple years ago,” Bella insists, but Will shakes his head.

“No it wasn’t, hon. That was last spring.”

Bella laughed ruefully and said she accepts Will’s expanding role in their marriage. “I appreciate it. I mean, there’s nothing he can do that will make me angry.”

One irony, painful and bittersweet, is that Bella and Will are experiencing a kind of honeymoon during this crisis, a new kind of romance — partly because Bella’s personality is already different. They talk about it on the podcast. “You’re a little more goofy, a little more upbeat and jolly,” Will says.

Bella agrees, telling NPR that one side-effect of the disease is that she’s less of “a boss,” less a “type-A perfectionist,” than she used to be. A lot of the time, she actually feels happier. “I should be depressed and walking around like the world is about to end, because it is,” she says, laughing and shaking her head.

But even this change comes with a sense of loss. Will misses the old Bella, the fierce, hard-driving woman who used to share his life. “I mean, you know, we fell in love. We’ve had a long marriage. It’s not like I wanted parts of her to fade away. I’m not saying I exactly miss our fights, but you know, that’s a part of who we were as a couple. And that’s not there now. It just really isn’t.”

So the Doolittles are making all kinds of adjustments as they try to figure out where this goes next. Will has taken over managing their finances. A lot of that used to be Bella’s job. Early-onset Alzheimer’s is a complicated condition, so Bella will eventually require special care. In the meantime, now that she’s not working, she’s arranging to take art classes and thinking about trying to start a home business.

On the podcast, she sounds committed to managing, maintaining some control, even as her mind changes. “I feel like I can go with the flow, but if the flow isn’t going the way I want it to go, I’m going to change that direction,” she insists.

“So that’s an optimistic way of looking at it,” Will responds.

“Yeah, it is optimistic,” she agrees.

Bella and Will say they plan to continue the podcast as long as possible even as her Alzheimer’s advances, talking candidly about this chapter of their marriage, about their love, and about the complexities of this disease, the things they’re gaining and the things that are slipping away.

“It doesn’t stop me from doing life,” Bella says. “The one thing that I really dislike about the disease is that I’m afraid that I’m not going to have as much time with my husband as I would like. I want us to be really old together. But if I die early, he’ll be on his own and I feel bad about that.”