FBI on Funeral and Cemetery Fraud – San Diego, CA


Senior welfare home care, san diego, california – FBI Fraud Warning Seniors: Cemetery Fraud

FBI Fraud Target: Senior Citizens – What to look for

The FBI’s Common Fraud Schemes webpage provides tips on how you can protect you and your family from fraud.

Funeral and Cemetery Fraud

Tips for Avoiding Funeral and Cemetery Fraud:

  • Be an informed consumer. Take time to call and shop around before making a purchase. Take a friend with you who may offer some perspective to help make difficult decisions. Funeral homes are required to provide detailed general price lists over the telephone or in writing.
  • Educate yourself fully about caskets before you buy one, and understand that caskets are not required for direct cremations.
  • Understand the difference between funeral home basic fees for professional services and any fees for additional services.
  • Know that embalming rules are governed by state law and that embalming is not legally required for direct cremations.
  • Carefully read all contracts and purchasing agreements before signing and make certain that all of your requirements have been put in writing.
  • Make sure you understand all contract cancellation and refund terms, as well as your portability options for transferring your contract to other funeral homes.
  • Before you consider prepaying, make sure you are well informed. When you do make a plan for yourself, share your specific wishes with those close to you.
  • As a general rule governing all of your interactions as a consumer, do not allow yourself to be pressured into making purchases, signing contracts, or committing funds. These decisions are yours and yours alon

File a complaint with the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center or contact your local FBI office.

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Jessica Perez
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Home Instead Senior Care
Secure Care Inc.9665 Granite Ridge Dr. Ste. 205
San Diego, CA 92123 USA
P: 858.277.3722
F: 858.277.6737
homeinsteadsd@aol.com
www.homeinstead.com/158
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FBI on Counterfeit Prescription Drugs – San Diego, CA


Senior welfare home care, san diego, california – FBI Fraud Warning for Seniors

FBI Fraud Target: Senior Citizens – What to look for

The FBI’s Common Fraud Schemes webpage provides tips on how you can protect you and your family from fraud.

Counterfeit Prescription Drugs

Tips for Avoiding Counterfeit Prescription Drugs:

  • Be mindful of appearance. Closely examine the packaging and lot numbers of prescription drugs and be alert to any changes from one prescription to the next.
  • Consult your pharmacist or physician if your prescription drug looks suspicious.
  • Alert your pharmacist and physician immediately if your medication causes adverse side effects or if your condition does not improve.
  • Use caution when purchasing drugs on the Internet. Do not purchase medications from unlicensed online distributors or those who sell medications without a prescription. Reputable online pharmacies will have a seal of approval called the Verified Internet Pharmacy Practice Site (VIPPS), provided by the Association of Boards of Pharmacy in the United States.
  • Be aware that product promotions or cost reductions and other “special deals” may be associated with counterfeit product promotion.

File a complaint with the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center or contact your local FBI office.

Get your FREE Guide to Senior Inhome Care at www.seniorcarechoicessd.com

NEED a CAREGiverSM

Compassionate CAREGivers are ready to help seniors live independently at home.
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Inquire about being a CAREGiver

Jessica Perez
Office Manager

Home Instead Senior Care
Secure Care Inc.9665 Granite Ridge Dr. Ste. 205
San Diego, CA 92123 USA
P: 858.277.3722
F: 858.277.6737
homeinsteadsd@aol.com
www.homeinstead.com/158
Each Home Instead Senior Care Franchise
is independently owned and operated.

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Hurricane Sandy – Senior STAR Initiative


Senior Welfare Home Care, San Diego, CA –

Hurricane Sandy can be especially hard on seniors.

Disaster Preparedness: The STAR Initiative

The Safety Training and Resources (STAR) Initiative is a community-based training and database development project designed to provide emergency responders with crucial resource information. This citizen-led program is designed to assist local agencies with collecting information for community preparedness.

Download your important article on Disaster Preparedness for the Vulnerable

This information is brought to you by NATI

The National Association of Triads is a partnership of three organizations—law enforcement, older adults, and community groups. The purpose of Triad is to promote older adult safety and to reduce the fear of crime that older adults often experience. NATI assists at the grassroots level, helping you organize your Triad and providing a clearinghouse of programs and resources that can be implemented at a community level, and training materials for law enforcement, volunteers, and community groups.

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Compassionate CAREGivers are ready to help seniors live independently at home.
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Inquire about being a CAREGiver

Jessica Perez
Office Manager

Home Instead Senior Care
Secure Care Inc.9665 Granite Ridge Dr. Ste. 205
San Diego, CA 92123 USA
P: 858.277.3722
F: 858.277.6737
homeinsteadsd@aol.com
www.homeinstead.com/158
Each Home Instead Senior Care Franchise
is independently owned and operated.

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Senior Welfare Home Care, San Diego, CA – Hurricane Sandy Senior Emergency Kit


Hurricane Sandy can be especially hard on seniors. Get a Free Senior Emergency Kit

Elder welfare home care, san diego, california – Oct. 31, 2012

Senior Emergency Kit

senior-emer-kit

The Home Instead Senior Care® network’s Senior Emergency KitSM can help ensure that family caregivers like you have fast and easy access to important information about loved ones in case of an emergency call.

This resource was developed with the assistance of Humana Points of Caregiving®. It is designed to help family caregivers gather details about a senior’s doctors, pharmacy and insurance company, medications and dosages, as well as allergies, power of attorney and other important information.

This toolkit will provide you with all the important information you need in a centrally located file so you are ready for a crisis, day or night.

 

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Jessica Perez
Office Manager

Home Instead Senior Care
Secure Care Inc.9665 Granite Ridge Dr. Ste. 205
San Diego, CA 92123 USA
P: 858.277.3722
F: 858.277.6737
homeinsteadsd@aol.com
www.homeinstead.com/158
Each Home Instead Senior Care Franchise
is independently owned and operated.

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Senior Welfare Home Care, San Diego, CA – Hurricane Sandy


Elder welfare home care, san diego, california – Hurricane Sandy can be especially hard on seniors.

Preparing seniors for hurricane Sandy

Older adults may be among the most vulnerable victims when hurricanes strike. That’s why Home Instead Senior Care has issued a disaster safety preparation checklist to help prepare seniors for the possibility of weather emergencies.

“We know that a disaster can be deadly for some seniors because of physical and other limitations,” said Sue Bidwell, owner of the Home Instead Office serving Ft. Myers and Naples. “That’s why the sooner the better for families to talk with their senior loved ones and begin preparing in advance for any kind of emergency that could threaten their health or safety. Consider this checklist as you help your older adult get ready.”

Home Instead Senior Care’s Disaster Prep Checklist For Seniors:

Tune in. Contact the local emergency management office to learn about the most likely natural disasters to strike your area. Stay abreast of what’s going on through your local radio or television.

Take stock. Decide what your senior can or can’t do in the event of a natural disaster. Make a list of what would be needed if a disaster occurred. For example, if your loved one is wheelchair-bound, determine an evacuation strategy ahead of time.

Prepare for whatever disaster could hit the area. To go or to stay? When deciding to evacuate, older adults should go sooner rather than later. By waiting too long, they may be unable leave if they require assistance.

Make a plan. Schedule a family meeting to develop a plan of action. Include in your plan key people – such as neighbors, friends, relatives and professional caregivers – who could help.

More than one way out. Seniors should develop at least two escape routes: one to evacuate their home and one to evacuate their community. The local emergency management office can tell you escape routes out of the community.

Meet up. Designate a place to meet relatives or key support network people outside the house, as well as a second location outside the neighborhood, such as a school or church. Practice the plan twice a year.

Get up and “Go Kit.” Have an easy-to-carry backpack including three days non-perishable food and water with an additional four days of food and water readily accessible at home. Have at least one gallon of bottled water per person per day. Refresh and replace your supplies at least twice a year. And don’t forget the blanket and paper products such as toilet paper.

Pack extras and copies. Have at least a one-month supply of medication on hand at all times. Make ready other important documents in a waterproof protector including copies of prescriptions, car title registration and driver’s license, insurance documents and bank account numbers, and spare checkbook. Also take extra eyeglasses and hearing-aid batteries. Label every piece of important equipment or personal item in case they are lost.

Your contact list. Compile a contact list and include people on a senior’s support network as well as doctors and other important health-care professionals.

If you can’t be there. If you’re not living close by to help your loved one, enlist the help of family or friends, or contact a professional caregiving company.

For more information about disaster preparedness, contact Home Instead

Senior Care at 239.596.2030 (Naples) or 239-226-0007 (Ft. Myers), or

http://www.homeinstead.com.

NEED a CAREGiverSM

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Jessica Perez
Office Manager

Home Instead Senior Care
Secure Care Inc.9665 Granite Ridge Dr. Ste. 205
San Diego, CA 92123 USA
P: 858.277.3722
F: 858.277.6737
homeinsteadsd@aol.com
www.homeinstead.com/158
Each Home Instead Senior Care Franchise
is independently owned and operated.

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Senior Welfare Home Care, San Diego, CA – FBI Fraud Website – what to look for


Elder welfare home care, san diego, california – FBI Fraud Warning for Seniors

FBI Fraud Target: Senior Citizens – What to look for

The FBI’s Common Fraud Schemes webpage provides tips on how you can protect you and your family from fraud.

What to Look For and How to Protect Yourself and Your Family

Health Care Fraud or Health Insurance Fraud

Medical Equipment Fraud:

Equipment manufacturers offer “free” products to individuals. Insurers are then charged for products that were not needed and/or may not have been delivered.

“Rolling Lab” Schemes:

Unnecessary and sometimes fake tests are given to individuals at health clubs, retirement homes, or shopping malls and billed to insurance companies or Medicare.

Services Not Performed:

Customers or providers bill insurers for services never rendered by changing bills or submitting fake ones.

Medicare Fraud:

Medicare fraud can take the form of any of the health insurance frauds described above. Senior citizens are frequent targets of Medicare schemes, especially by medical equipment manufacturers who offer seniors free medical products in exchange for their Medicare numbers. Because a physician has to sign a form certifying that equipment or testing is needed before Medicare pays for it, con artists fake signatures or bribe corrupt doctors to sign the forms. Once a signature is in place, the manufacturers bill Medicare for merchandise or service that was not needed or was not ordered.

File a complaint with the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center or contact your local FBI office.

Get your FREE Guide to Senior Inhome Care at www.seniorcarechoicessd.com

NEED a CAREGiverSM

Compassionate CAREGivers are ready to help seniors live independently at home.
Inquire about service today!

Become a CAREGiverSM

Seeking employment? Have what it takes to help seniors lead rewarding lives?
Inquire about being a CAREGiver

Jessica Perez
Office Manager

Home Instead Senior Care
Secure Care Inc.9665 Granite Ridge Dr. Ste. 205
San Diego, CA 92123 USA
P: 858.277.3722
F: 858.277.6737
homeinsteadsd@aol.com
www.homeinstead.com/158
Each Home Instead Senior Care Franchise
is independently owned and operated.

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Senior Welfare Home Care, San Diego, CA – FBI Fraud for Seniors


Elder welfare home care, san diego, california – FBI Fraud Warning for Seniors

FBI Fraud Target: Senior Citizens

The FBI’s Common Fraud Schemes webpage provides tips on how you can protect you and your family from fraud. Senior Citizens especially should be aware of fraud schemes for the following reasons:

  • Senior citizens are most likely to have a “nest egg,” to own their home, and/or to have excellent credit—all of which make them attractive to con artists.
  • People who grew up in the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s were generally raised to be polite and trusting. Con artists exploit these traits, knowing that it is difficult or impossible for these individuals to say “no” or just hang up the telephone.
  • Older Americans are less likely to report a fraud because they don’t know who to report it to, are too ashamed at having been scammed, or don’t know they have been scammed. Elderly victims may not report crimes, for example, because they are concerned that relatives may think the victims no longer have the mental capacity to take care of their own financial affairs.
  • When an elderly victim does report the crime, they often make poor witnesses. Con artists know the effects of age on memory, and they are counting on elderly victims not being able to supply enough detailed information to investigators. In addition, the victims’ realization that they have been swindled may take weeks—or more likely, months—after contact with the fraudster. This extended time frame makes it even more difficult to remember details from the events.
  • Senior citizens are more interested in and susceptible to products promising increased cognitive function, virility, physical conditioning, anti-cancer properties, and so on. In a country where new cures and vaccinations for old diseases have given every American hope for a long and fruitful life, it is not so unbelievable that the con artists’ products can do what they claim.

Get your FREE Guide to Senior Inhome Care at www.seniorcarechoicessd.com

NEED a CAREGiverSM

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Seeking employment? Have what it takes to help seniors lead rewarding lives?
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Jessica Perez
Office Manager

Home Instead Senior Care
Secure Care Inc.9665 Granite Ridge Dr. Ste. 205
San Diego, CA 92123 USA
P: 858.277.3722
F: 858.277.6737
homeinsteadsd@aol.com
www.homeinstead.com/158
Each Home Instead Senior Care Franchise
is independently owned and operated.

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Senior Welfare Home Care, San Diego, CA – Mary Maxwell and the secret recipe


Elder welfare home care, san diego, california

Mary Maxwell: Sharing the Secret Recipe

Maria is reluctant to give her daughter-in-law the family's secret recipe. Mary serves up her thoughts on this family situation.

Maria is reluctant to give her daughter-in-law the family’s secret recipe. Mary serves up her thoughts on this family situation.

Download a transcript of this Mary Maxwell video (PDF)

Good nutrition is the first line of defense for older adults who are striving to maintain their independence as they age. Visit Cooking Under Pressure for nutrition resources for healthy aging.

Get your FREE Guide to Senior Inhome Care at www.seniorcarechoicessd.com

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Jessica Perez
Office Manager

Home Instead Senior Care
Secure Care Inc.9665 Granite Ridge Dr. Ste. 205
San Diego, CA 92123 USA
P: 858.277.3722
F: 858.277.6737
homeinsteadsd@aol.com
www.homeinstead.com/158
Each Home Instead Senior Care Franchise
is independently owned and operated.

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Senior Welfare Home Care, San Diego, CA – Lotsa Helping Hands Began


Elder welfare home care, san diego, california

The Lotsa Helping Hands Guidepost inspiring story of how one man’s devastating experience led him and best friend Hal Chapel to help others facing challenges.

By Barry Katz, Sudbury, Massachusetts

As appeared in

There was a room in my house I’d been avoiding.

My upstairs office, where I took off my husband-and-father hat and put on that of cofounder of a high-tech start-up.

For the past several months, since my wife, Carole, had died of ovarian cancer, I hadn’t been able to bring myself to do much work. But that winter morning, watching our teenage daughters, Lauren and Julia, set off for school, I noticed them laughing as they walked to the bus stop. I felt a rush of relief and gratitude that their grief was healing. Maybe it’s time for me to get back to living my life too, I thought.

I turned and headed upstairs. My office wasn’t the neatest. The business was fast paced, and I always had printouts and reports scattered all over.

One thing kept me from chaos: the whiteboard on the wall behind my desk. It was like a giant memo pad, filled with notes to myself, ideas, lists of things to do. It was empty now.

But I remembered how it looked in Carole’s last weeks, when I was struggling to be husband, dad, chauffeur, tutor, caregiver. The notes had been replaced by shorthand phrases, each a task that needed my attention in order to keep our family functioning.

I sat at my desk and exhaled. Last summer should’ve been a happy time. Carole was sick, in her fourth year of battling cancer, but experimental drug treatments had seemed to stabilize her. My business was doing well enough that I could cut back on work and look after her and our daughters.

Mornings I fixed breakfast for the girls and got them off to school. Afternoons I spent with Carole, usually at the hospital for treatments that lasted till evening. Nights I fixed dinner and helped Julia and Lauren with homework. I tried to maintain a sense of normalcy.

We were all looking forward to Julia’s Bat Mitzvah. It was scheduled for October, when she turned 13, the day, according to the Jewish faith, on which she would take her place in our spiritual community as an adult. She would read a passage from the Torah and then deliver a sermon on its meaning.

We had planned a big party afterward for family and friends. A sit-down dinner, each table with a gorgeous floral arrangement. A DJ to get everyone dancing, starting with the hora, a traditional Jewish dance.

Most of the preparation for Julia’s big day fell to me, but that was okay.

The important thing was that Carole would be at temple and at the party, that our family would celebrate together.

Then one day in August while Carole was getting treatment, her oncologist took me aside. “I know you have this event coming up in October,” he said gently. “If I were you, I’d move it up.” The cancer had spread. Carole had just weeks to live. I was so devastated I couldn’t respond. It was taking all the energy I could muster to keep our family on an even keel. How would I manage now?

I had to talk to our rabbi and reschedule the Bat Mitzvah. Step up Julia’s Torah lessons so she’d be prepared on her big day. Renegotiate contracts with the caterer, the florist, the DJ. Take care of Carole. Deal with the doctors. Alert all our family and friends. And somehow prepare our girls for what was to come.

It’s is all up to you now, I told myself. You’ve got to keep it together. But I couldn’t, not always. I didn’t want Carole or the kids to see me crack. Sometimes I slipped out the door, drove down the street, parked and let the tears flow. God, I don’t know how I’ll get through this.

Maybe a week after the oncologist’s bleak news, out of desperation I called one of Carole’s aunts. “Can you come over afternoons and watch the kids while I’m with Carole at the hospital?”

“Sure,” she said. “Anything else?”

I was so relieved, I almost started weeping.

“That would be plenty,” I said.

Carole’s aunt must’ve burned up the phone lines afterward, because that night my cousin Bob called. “I hear you have to move up the date of Julia’s Bat Mitzvah,” he said. “Write out what needs to be done and we’ll take care of it.” I could have hugged him. I ticked off every item on the whiteboard. “I’ll get the word out,” Bob promised.

The next day help rolled in. A friend e-mailed that he’d deal with the caterer. A neighbor said he’d contact the florist. A colleague volunteered to work things out with the DJ. That night Carole and I came home from the hospital to find a casserole on the stoop with a note from a neighbor: Thought you might like some dinner.

On the day of her Bat Mitzvah, Julia chanted her Torah portion beautifully, then spoke in her sermon of love, of family, of helping hands, of trust. Her eyes fell on Carole, seated in her wheelchair between Lauren and me.

“Today I take my place in a special community,” she said. I looked around the synagogue, at all our family and friends. Why had I thought it was up to me to take care of everything? I’d never been in this alone. I had only to ask for help, and it was there.

Carole died six days later. For a long time the girls and I were shrouded in grief. Then came that winter morning I returned to my office and looked up at my whiteboard. I thought of all the notes I’d written on it in Carole’s last weeks.

What I really wanted to do, I decided, was to make our family’s struggles count for something. I wanted to start a free online service that would help other families overwhelmed by a crisis. In a flash a name came to me, something Julia had talked about in her Bat Mitzvah sermon: lots of helping hands.

I gave up my responsibilities in the start-up to one of my partners, and within a year I launched a website: lotsahelpinghands.com. It provides a simple way for overstressed families to reach out to relatives, friends and neighbors for help in getting through their day-to-day lives.

Each family sets up their own calendar that shows when and what kind of help is needed (like meals, rides, childcare) and lets volunteers sign up for specific tasks. It’s kind of a digital version of my whiteboard, but a lot better organized.

We have been online for five years now and helped more than 25,000 families worldwide through tough times that no one should have to face alone. And as I was so powerfully reminded the day of my younger daughter’s Bat Mitzvah, none of us does.

©2010 by Guideposts, All Rights Reserved

From the February 2010 issue of Guideposts

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Jessica Perez
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Home Instead Senior Care
Secure Care Inc.9665 Granite Ridge Dr. Ste. 205
San Diego, CA 92123 USA
P: 858.277.3722
F: 858.277.6737
homeinsteadsd@aol.com
www.homeinstead.com/158
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Senior Welfare Home Care, San Diego, CA – Caregiver and Health Organizations


Elder welfare home care, san diego, california

Caregiver Resources and Monthly Tips – Lotsa Helping Hands

Lotsa Helping Hands offers free tools designed to make life easier for caregivers and volunteers such as secure online Private and Open Community web sites, the caregiver-focused Help Calendar, community building features that bring emotional support to the family and resources to help caregivers in their journey.

Plus, each month we post caregiver resources and offer archives of our webinars and monthly newsletters. Check back often and don’t hesitate to give us your feedback. We hope you find these caregiver resources and tips helpful.

Tap into caregiver resources from leading caregiver and health organizations

We partner with more than 50 of the nation’s leading nonprofit organizations that provide trusted information on a variety of health and caregiving topics that may be helpful to your Community. So, whether someone is caring for a loved one with Leukemia, a wounded warrior who recently arrived home, or someone battling Alzheimer’s disease, we’ve got the resources you need.

If you choose to identify with one of our nonprofit partners, your Community will include relevant resources, links and logos from that organization. You can change your settings to identify with one of our partners by clicking on the ‘site options’ link on the ‘Administration’ tab.

 

Share With Us

Whether you are a caregiver who has benefited from the power of your community or a volunteer who has helped, share your story in the comments section.

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Jessica Perez
Office Manager

Home Instead Senior Care
Secure Care Inc.9665 Granite Ridge Dr. Ste. 205
San Diego, CA 92123 USA
P: 858.277.3722
F: 858.277.6737
homeinsteadsd@aol.com
www.homeinstead.com/158
Each Home Instead Senior Care Franchise
is independently owned and operated.

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