Friday, June 30, 2017

Brain Awareness Month

For more than a year, I completed 470 assessments of mostly homebound older people.  Like being a bartender, my work involved listening to people’s long life stories—except I met clients in their homes and asked about their functional abilities, health conditions, home environment, support systems, etc.  Many clients told me that they preferred their impaired physical mobility over “losing" their minds or developing dementia.  One client casually reported that she was taking Donezepil for dementia; but after I read a letter (in plain view, posted on her bedroom wall) from her neurologist stating that she scored 15/30 in MMSE and diagnosing her with moderate to severe Alzheimer’s disease, she became visibly upset, clutching her head with both hands and repeatedly saying, “no, no, no ...”

Anyone with a brain is vulnerable to dementia, which remains the most expensive disease in America.  Alzheimer’s is the most common form of dementia, affecting 1 in 10 people age 65+, and the most feared disease in America

Hundreds, including yours truly, showed up at Jewish Community Center of San Francisco (JCCSF) for its inaugural Brain Fitness Forum, a full day scheduled with speakers and stimulating activities (coloring craze, growing herbs at home, tai chi, etc.). 
In “Growing and Managing Your Brain Health,” brain plasticity researcher Michael Merzenich, PhD, shared this list of “vicissitudes across the life course” that add to brain noise, making us vulnerable to dementia.  He advised that our brains need exercise to sustain high function and boost our cognitive reserve. 
Lunch break performance by Community Music Center 30th Street Senior Chorus, part of Community of Voices research study by UCSF on the impact of choir participation on senior health, including memory.  
JCCSF Adult Programs Manager Shiva Schulz introduced neuroscientist Robert F. Halliwell, PhD, who provided tips on “How to Maintain a Healthy Brain without Really Trying”:
  1. good night’s sleep
  2. reading
  3. avoid stress
  4. enjoy healthy diet including chocolate!
The Forum ended with a screening of the documentary, My Love Affair with the Brain: The Life and Science of Dr. Marian Diamond.  Better than Wonder Woman, Dr. Diamond is known for her pioneering research on how brain development can be stimulated by an enriched environment
  1. diet
  2. exercise
  3. challenge
  4. newness
  5. love
With fellow neuroanatomist Arnold Scheibel (her husband died in April), Dr. Diamond co-authored, The Human Brain Coloring Book (1985).  The documentary showed Dr. Diamond teaching neuroanatomy at UC Berkeley, using the old school way of handwriting on blackboard as she explained that learning is kinesthetic so we better absorb information when using pen/pencil to paper.  The Forum included kinesthetic Coloring Craze session by Martha Russell, who provided colored pencils, coloring pages (download free mini coloring book at National Coloring Book Day) and research on the cognitive benefits of coloring (which works like mindfulness to calm and stimulate the brain). 

Stimulated to learn more about Dr. Diamond, I checked out Magic Trees of the Mind: How to Nurture Your Child's Intelligence, Creativity, and Healthy Emotions from Birth Through Adolescence (1999), which is actually intended to inspire all age groups for a lifetime of learning, as Dr. Diamond and co-author Janet Hopson wrote in “Introduction – Experience is the Best Sculptor”:
“Fully two-thirds of American adults have sedentary lifestyles; and the majority have high-fat, high-calorie diets; seldom read or create things for pleasure; and watch television for hours every day. It would be surprising, then, if the average child had a regimen any different. If our book has the kind of positive effect we envision, it will inspire a new level of mental and physical activity in all age groups.
It doesn’t take money to create a climate for enchanted minds to grow. It just takes information, imagination, motivation, and effort. Once the habit of active involvement is entrained, experience will take over and those stimulated minds will do the rest for themselves in surprising and delightful ways.”

I thought about putting Dr. Diamond’s research on enriched environments into practice in my own life, including work with clients.

Diet

The Mediterranean and MIND (Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay) diets were recommended “Brain Food,” in the June/July 2017 issue of Neurology Now. Both focus on eating plants (whole grains, nuts, legumes, fruits, vegetables), fish, monounsaturated fats (olive oil), red wine in moderation.  MIND diet focuses on 10 brain healthy food groups (green leafy vegetables, other vegetables, nuts, berries, beans, whole grains, fish, poultry, olive oil, wine) and restricts red meats, butter/margarine, cheese, pastries/sweets, fried/fast food.  Home-delivered meals often do not include nuts, which should be soaked for proper digestion.  
Hot lunch delivered by On Lok (funded by Medicare + Medicaid) to homebound client, who also received home-delivered meals from Meals on Wheels (suggested donation $5 for 2 subsidized meals) and The Salvation Army Meals that Heal (suggested donation $20 per month for weekday hot meals).

This client also received CalFresh, or federally known as Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which may be used to purchase nuts (if one does not have nut allergy) that are recommended “brain food.”  In early 2018, SNAP is launching a pilot program to allow recipients to buy food online from retailers like Amazon.  One wonders if this month’s Amazon-Whole Foods deal means better access to organic foods?

Some clients, who reside in Tenderloin SROs without access to kitchens, told me they never received proper nutrition until they became seniors eligible for elderly nutrition programs.  However, a lifetime of poor nutrition (see Chin Jou’s Supersizing Urban America: How Inner Cities Got Fast Food with Government Help) contributed to chronic conditions (osteoarthritis, COPD, obesity, urinary incontinence, shortness of breath) that limit their mobility, so they have difficulty getting to senior congregate meal sites where they could also benefit from social support instead of isolation. Some chronic conditions also make chewing/swallowing food or feeding oneself difficult. 
Even when this SRO building elevator is operational, my frail clients cannot safely open the heavy cage door, so they rely on home-deliveries of food.  While physical frailty is associated with cognitive impairment and dementia, researchers at National University of Singapore found that a combination of good nutrition, physical training and mental exercise can reverse frailty in elderly.

Exercise

Not everyone aspires to be like Charles Eugster, who took up bodybuilding for 10 years until his death at age 97 this year. According to neuroscientist Agnieszka Burzynska, activities involving moving and socializing might improve mental abilities in aging brains. 
In commemoration of its 10th anniversary, Hope Mohr Dance collaborated with Shaping SF to produce Precarious: Labor History Walking Tour  --awesome community engagement for all ages that provided outdoor walking exercise, singing, learning labor history and advocacy! Starting at Edwin Klockars Blacksmithing (built 1912, to support railroad, bridge and ship building through the 1950s) in South of Market area, we received lyric sheets and joined sing-along with Community Music Center’s Aquatic Park Senior Choir, led by Beth Wilmurt and Josh Pollock playing guitar to Bob Dylan’s “The Times They Are A-Changing.”  
We strolled on Tehama Street and sang Joe Glazer’s “Too Old to Work” (The Social Security Song) ... 
passed by sheet metal works building, built 1902     
Rest stop to hear Shaping SF co-director Chris Carlsson talk about Douglas Tilden’s Mechanics’ Monument, which survived 1906 earthquake, and 1907 San Francisco Streetcar Strike 
Market Street Trolley stopped, but too full to board, so we remained at the stop and sang “Trolley Song” to the amusement of passengers… 
hopped on next Muni bus and sang “Trolley Song” again. 
Finale with Pete Seeger’s “Tomorrow is a Highway.”

Challenge

Every new challenge presents an opportunity to think and do something: adapt (“Making Solitude out of Loneliness” ), advocate (“Challenges of Being an Advocate”), innovate (“I Remember Better When I Paint”), persist in hope (“Breaking Out of Locked In Syndrome”), etc.  For example, I suggest that clients, recently diagnosed with some form of dementia, document their advance care directive, life history, favorite music and activities.  This documentation will serve as a foundation for person-centered care to guide future caregivers with a better understanding of who they are and how to engage them when they lose capacity to verbally express themselves.  
At this month’s SF Bay Area Network for End-Of-Life Care meeting, Professor Nate Hinerman (who taught Death and Dying course at SFSU) introduced Isabel Yuriko Stenzel Byrnes, Mission Hospice bereavement social worker who leads writing groups for those who are grieving.  Isabel and her identical twin sister Anabel published their memoir, The Power of Two: A Twin Triumph over Cystic Fibrosis (2007), which was made into a documentary film (2011) focused on advocacy for organ donations after learning that their double lung transplants would have been more challenging in their mother’s native country Japan for legal (brain death requirement) and cultural (Buddhist belief not to divide body after death) reasons.  In 2014, Isabel delivered a moving TED talk, “The Art of Saying Goodbye” on the challenge of coping with Anabel's death. 
Housing in San Francisco remains a challenge, especially for older people who are long-term tenants targeted for eviction by landlords who seek higher profits.  At Rosa Parks Senior Center, SF Anti-Displacement Coalition (“Fighting to Make San Francisco Affordable to All”) hosted Western Addition Tenant Convention In Honor of Iris Canada, the 100-year-old Western Addition resident who died a month after being evicted from her apartment where she lived for more than half her life.  
Western Addition resident and activist Wade Woods introduced excerpts from documentary, Redevelopment: A Marxist Analysis, showing how redevelopment in the 1960s displaced African-Americans in the once vibrant Fillmore, and talked about need for more affordable housing.  With its transition zone microclimate, flat surface friendly to walkers and wheelchair users, proximity to retail and access to several Muni bus lines, Western Addition remains a desirable neighborhood for older people.  
Iris Canada’s niece, Iris Merriouns, said her late aunt’s body remains in a morgue since her death three months ago, because Canada’s family is unable to pay storage fees to access her prepaid funeral contract. Senior & Disability Action (SDA) Housing Organizer Theresa Flandrich talked about forming Neighborhood Speculator Watch to defend against speculators (aka sucking octopus) by identifying common evictor tactics:
1.     buying a building
2.     eviction threats & harassment
3.     short-term rentals
4.     luxury development 
Tommi Avicolla MeccaDirector of Counseling Programs at Housing Rights Committee of SF, recommended education about tenant rights and community organizing.
SDA Housing Organizer Tony Robles reinforced our learning by asking us to write our takeaways on post-it notes to "Stick It to the Speculator" poster.

Newness

In direct service work with older people, the best part of the job is listening so I am always learning something new.  As people age, they become more different, present multiple comorbidities, and often share their life lessons. As geriatricians say, “If you’ve seen one 80-year-old, then you’ve seen one 80-year-old.”  With clients who have cognitive impairment, interactions are often like improvisation!

Love

This is not puppy love, but senior dog love at Muttville Senior Dog Rescue, which is dedicated to improving the lives of senior dogs through rescue, foster, adoption and hospice.
Muttville’s Seniors for Seniors Program offers free senior dog companions for senior humans age 62+: perfect match for shut-in clients! 
Senior dogs for adoption are often described as shy, sweet and mellow.
Some shut-in clients have told me they avoid human interaction, but bond better with animals, especially dogs who provide unconditional love to reduce anxiety, depression and social isolation.  Some studies indicate that people with dementia who received dog therapy improved cognition, as measured by MMSE. 

5 comments:

  1. Marian Cleeves Diamond, UC Berkeley professor who studied Einstein's brain, dies at 90
    Drew Costley
    Saturday, July 29, 2017
    Marian Cleeves Diamond, the UC Berkeley professor who studied Albert Einstein's brain, died Monday in Oakland, the university said in a press release Friday. She was 90.
    Diamond was "one of the founders of modern neuroscience," the release said, by being the first to show that the human brain has the ability to change with experience and improve with enrichment.
    She showed evidence of this capability in Einstein's brain, achieving celebrity status in 1984 when she examined preserved slices of the famed physicist's brain. Einstein had more support cells in his brain than the average person, she observed.
    Perhaps more famously, though, was her pioneering work on the concept of neuroplasticity. In her study of rats, she showed that an enriched environment changed the anatomy of the brain. If applied to humans, that meant that a richer environment could improve the anatomy of the brain, while an impoverished environment could have negative impacts on the brain.
    "Her research demonstrated the impact of enrichment on brain development — a simple but powerful new understanding that has literally changed the world, from how we think about ourselves to how we raise our children," said UC Berkeley colleague George Brooks, a professor of integrative biology in the university's press release.
    "Dr. Diamond showed anatomically, for the first time, what we now call plasticity of the brain. In doing so, she shattered the old paradigm of understanding the brain as a static and unchangeable entity that simply degenerated as we age. "
    She recalled in her 1998 book, "Magic Trees of the Mind: How to Nurture your Child's Intelligence, Creativity, and Healthy Emotions from Birth through Adolescence," co-authored with Janet Hopson, that her findings were met with resistance by some in the neuroscience field.
    She said that one man stood up after a talk she gave at a conference and loudly challenged her by saying, "Young lady, that brain cannot change!"
    She said she replied by saying that, "I'm sorry, sir, but we have the initial experiment and the replication experiment that shows it can."
    "It was an uphill battle for women scientists then — even more than now — and people at scientific conferences are often terribly critical," she wrote in the book. Eventually, she showed that the brain can continue to develop at any age.
    Also, she found that the brains of females and males are structured differently, and brain stimulation can improve the immune system.
    In addition to being a groundbreaking researcher, Diamond was an impactful professor and lecturer. At the time of her death, she was a professor emerita of integrative biology at UC Berkeley.
    She taught generations of students, including Wendy Suzuki, a professor at New York University and neuroscientist who recalled studying under Diamond in a 2011 TED Talk. Diamond's lectures on anatomy continue to teach through YouTube – a video of one of her lectures has over a million views.
    Diamond was born Nov. 11, 1926, in Glendale, Calif., the youngest of six children of Dr. Montague Cleeves, an immigrant from northern England, and Rosa Marian Wamphler, a Berkeley graduate who abandoned her doctoral studies to raise her children in La Crescenta.
    ...She graduated from Berkeley with a bachelor's degree in 1948, and continued studying at the school to become its first female graduate student in the school's anatomy department.
    Diamond served as a research assistant at Harvard University, taught at Cornell University and the UCSF, and then returned to Berkeley in 1960, where she served as a professor until her death.
    She was proceeded in death by Arnold "Arne" Schiebel, who passed away on April 3, 2017.
    http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Berkeley-professor-who-studied-Einstein-brain-died-11717909.php

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  2. What building is the antique elevator with a scissor gate in? I ask because I have an interest in original antique elevators.

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  3. Good Friends Might Be Your Best Brain Booster As You Age
    By Judith Graham DECEMBER 14, 2017
    Ask Edith Smith, a proud 103-year-old, about her friends, and she’ll give you an earful.
    … “I’m a very friendly person,” Smith said, when asked to describe herself.
    That may be one reason why this lively centenarian has an extraordinary memory for someone her age, suggests a recent study by researchers at Northwestern University highlighting a notable link between brain health and positive relationships.
    For nine years, these experts have been examining “SuperAgers” — men and women over age 80 whose memories are as good — or better — than people 20 to 30 years younger. Every couple of years, the group fills out surveys about their lives and gets a battery of neuropsychological tests, brain scans and a neurological examination, among other evaluations.
    “When we started this project, we weren’t really sure we could find these individuals,” said Emily Rogalski, an associate professor at the Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer’s Disease Center at Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine.
    But find them they did: Thirty-one older men and women with exceptional memories, mostly from Illinois and surrounding states, are currently participating in the project. “Part of the goal is to characterize them — who are they, what are they like,” Rogalski said.
    Previous research by the Northwestern group provided tantalizing clues, showing that SuperAgers have distinctive brain features: thicker cortexes, a resistance to age-related atrophy and a larger left anterior cingulate (a part of the brain important to attention and working memory).
    But brain structure alone doesn’t fully account for SuperAgers’ unusual mental acuity, Rogalski suggested. “It’s likely there are a number of critical factors that are implicated,” she said.
    For their new study, the researchers asked 31 SuperAgers and 19 cognitively “normal” older adults to fill out a 42-item questionnaire about their psychological well-being. The SuperAgers stood out in one area: the degree to which they reported having satisfying, warm, trusting relationships. (In other areas, such as having a purpose in life or retaining autonomy, they were much like their “normal” peers.)
    “Social relationships are really important” to this group and might play a significant role in preserving their cognition, Rogalski said.
    That finding is consistent with other research linking positive relationships to a reduced risk of cognitive decline, mild cognitive impairment and dementia. Still, researchers haven’t examined how SuperAgers sustain these relationships and whether their experiences might include lessons for others.
    Smith, one of the SuperAgers, “Many old people, all they do is tell you the same story over and over …And sometimes, all they do is complain and not show any interest in what you have to say. That’s terrible. You have to listen to what people have to say.”
    Brian Fenwick, administrator of the Bethany Retirement Community where Smith lives, calls Smith a “leader in the community” and explains that “she’s very involved. She keeps us in line. She notices what’s going on and isn’t afraid to speak out.”
    “You can’t drop your friends and expect them to be there when you’re ready.”
    What she does every day, she said, is “show people I care.”William “Bill“ Gurolnick, 86, another SuperAger in the study, realized the value of becoming more demonstrative …
    Activities are another way of cultivating relationships …“You really get a sense of still being alive,” Gurolnick said, when asked what he takes away from these interactions. “You get a sense of not being alone.”
    …Evelyn Finegan, 88, …Another SuperAger ”It’s very important to keep up with your friends — to pick up the phone and call,” ...
    “It’s so nice to spend time with Evelyn,” said her upstairs neighbor, June Witzl, 91,… “She’s very kind and very generous. And she tells you what she believes so you really feel like you know her, instead of wondering what’s on her mind.”
    https://khn.org/news/good-friends-might-be-your-best-brain-booster-as-you-age/

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  4. A woman in San Francisco lives on $30,000 a year – with no internet, cable or car
    Melia Robinson
    Thursday, March 22, 2018
    Beth Wilmurt, a stage actress who has lived in the San Francisco Bay Area for most of her life, makes as much money in a year as some people spend on a single month's rent in the city.
    She earns $30,000 a year, on average, between acting and her side hustles — teaching music and babysitting. Wilmurt told local broadcasting station KQED that she's made it work living in San Francisco over her nearly three-decade career, though it's getting harder all the time.
    The Bay Area has become unlivable for many artists, artisans, longtime residents, and even tech entrepreneurs. A lack of affordable housing and out-of-control housing prices have caused many people, including Wilmurt, to flood the rental market. In March, San Francisco's median two-bedroom rent of $3,040 was about two and a half times as high as the national average.
    San Francisco lost more residents than any other US city in the last quarter of 2017, according to data from real-estate site Redfin.
    Wilmurt, who has performed in around 60 stage productions over the last 30 years, told KQED that she's managed to stay in the Bay Area by cutting out what some would consider necessities.
    "No car, no internet at home, no Netflix, no cable," she said. "I'm on a family phone plan — I share 2GB of data with four people." Wilmurt has a flip phone instead of a smartphone.
    She and her partner, Mark Jackson, a theater director, have occupied the same rent-controlled, one-bedroom apartment in the hip Haight neighborhood since 1996. The monthly rent: $500.
    "Rent control is the golden handcuff," Wilmurt told KQED. "If I lost that, I'd have to leave for sure."
    She added that the home is falling apart and in need of repairs.
    Wilmurt holds many jobs. According to KQED, she directs local children's and senior choruses, teaches at an elementary school in the Mission, leads summer-camp workshops, and babysits.
    The performer said her lifestyle has always been driven by her artistic goals — "not a strategic plan for my financial future." She hopes to stay in the area, but she's aware of the difficulties.
    "For the first time I am feeling insecure about my financial future as I am feeling the effects of aging," Wilmurt said. "The word 'hustle,' which I guess is what I've been doing all these years, is now feeling like hustling, and needs to be a more financially driven hustle than art-driven."
    https://www.sfgate.com/technology/businessinsider/article/A-woman-in-San-Francisco-says-she-gets-by-on-12774839.php

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  5. Supervisors reject condo conversion of evicted centenarian Iris Canada’s home
    By Laura Waxmann on April 24, 2018
    The Board of Supervisors voted on Tuesday to uphold a Planning Commission decision to block the landlords of the Western Addition apartment building that housed centenarian Iris Canada from turning the site into condominiums.
    With a 10-1 vote, a majority of the board echoed a unanimous vote by the Planning Commission in March that rejected the application for a condo conversion permit at 668-678 Page St. on the grounds that the six-unit property had been subject to the eviction of a senior and that the landlords failed to indicate this on their application.
    San Francisco code prohibits condo conversions at properties where a senior has been evicted.
    “The sheriff went into her home and executed an eviction notice, removing all her possessions from her home,” said Board President London Breed…
    Canada died in March 2017, a month after her landlords changed the locks to the apartment she had called home for more than half of her life. The landlords claimed she had not resided at 670 Page St. since 2012.
    On Tuesday, the board was tasked with weighing elements of what constitutes an eviction and opined on the definitions of residency and displacement.
    …City planner David Weissglass said planning code does not give a “specific definition of eviction or displacement,” allowing the commissioners to come to their own conclusions on “whether the property owner did indeed evict or displace” Canada.
    “They made the decision that the changing the locks constituted an eviction,” Weissglass said.
    …Supervisor Katy Tang, the only member of the board to vote in favor of the appeal, pointed out that Canada was paying off a mortgage rather than rent. “There has been doubt between whether she was evicted as a tenant versus a part owner,” she said.
    In 2002, Peter Owens and two other owners purchased the six-unit building and converted the apartments to tenancy-in-common units. They also moved to evict all tenants except for Canada using the Ellis Act.
    Pierce said Owens acted in “good faith” by negotiating a lifelong tenancy with Canada through the life estate agreement, granting her part ownership of her unit along with the right to reject a condo-conversion of the property.
    But Deepa Varma, director of the San Francisco Tenants Union, called this assertion “untrue.”
    “They brought an Ellis Act eviction against entire building. Simply because [Canada] was elderly, they had to give her a life estate,” Varma said. “When she began to live for another 10 years, they got impatient. They served her an eviction notice.”
    In 2014, the building owners alleged Canada had been living with relatives and let her apartment fall into a state of disrepair. They moved to terminate her life estate agreement and were supported by a court judgment in their favor. Owens eventually succeeded in displacing Canada after the Sheriff’s Department changed her locks in February 2017.
    More than two dozen advocates and supporters of Canada urged the supervisors to deny the appeal, which they said was filed out of greed…
    The supervisors’ decision prohibits the property owners from reapplying for condo conversion permit application for 18 months.
    http://www.sfexaminer.com/supervisors-reject-condo-conversion-evicted-centenarian-iris-canadas-home/

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