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Apple Watch Series 4: New Fall Detection & ECG for the Win

By Hurley Elder Care Law | April 3, 2019

  My mother-in-law is prone to seizures! She lost her husband in 2009 and lives in a big two-story house by herself. Over the past couple of years, she has had more incidents of blacking out and falling. Mine, and my wife’s biggest concern, is that she has no one there to know when an…

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Finding an Elder Law Specialist in Georgia: Certified Elder Law Attorneys

By Hurley Elder Care Law | March 27, 2019

  Attorneys, just like many other professionals, can choose to be generalists or specialists. When dealing with elder law matters, it is important for every client to know the difference between an attorney who specialized in elder law and one who dabbles in elder law. “There’s an attorney in my congregation who can help me…

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Hurley Elder Care Law Offers Free Resources

By Hurley Elder Care Law | February 27, 2019

As more and more families are facing the challenges of aging and disability, we are seeing an increase in those seeking the counsel of an elder law attorney. Questions about estate planning, asset protection planning, trust administration, Medicaid planning, and guardianship issues are our specialty. In a response to the growing need of our community,…

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Community Resource Highlight: Georgia Memory Net

By Hurley Elder Care Law | November 28, 2018

  In our latest newsletter, we advised families to not avoid getting a dementia diagnosis.  For many reasons, a timely diagnosis of dementia can be crucial. Of course, finding quality providers who can assist with testing, diagnosing and treating can be tricky. There are about 140,000 Georgians who have Alzheimer’s disease, but there are more…

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Becoming an Unexpected Caregiver

By Hurley Elder Care Law | November 14, 2018

  In September, the New York Times ran a story by Sandeep Jauhaur on caring for his aging parents. His mom has Parkinson’s disease, and his dad dementia. Jauhaur noted that “ my siblings and I joined the ranks of the 15 million or so unpaid and untrained family caregivers for older adults in this…

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Athletes Face LBD Danger from Contact Sports

By Hurley Elder Care Law | August 8, 2018

Dem Sports athletes may be at increased risk for Lewy Body Disease (LBD) which can then cause Parkinson’s disease, a brain disorder that leads to problems with movement and thinking. A new study by VA-BU-CLF Brain Bank just published in the Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, suggests that sports athletes may be at increased…

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When Elder Care Professionals Face Aging Issues in Their Own Families

By Hurley Elder Care Law | June 27, 2018

It seems like I should be better at this. For years I have been helping other families care for their aging parents. I know the signs of dementia, I know the best providers, I know the resources in Atlanta, but I do not know how to help my own parents. I can see that they…

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Problematic Siblings: How having a brother or sister can actually make it worse…

By Hurley Elder Care Law | June 20, 2018

Oftentimes, “only children” will tell me that they wish they had a sibling to help them shoulder the burden of caring for an aging parent. I chuckle in my head at this naive assumption of teamwork and cooperation that “only children” can hold of siblings. Sure, some families do have strong sibling support systems that…

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Five Tips for Helping Your Divorced, Aging Parent

By Hurley Elder Care Law | June 6, 2018

My parents have been divorced for over three decades, and my mom has been very self-sufficient until recently. After a few scary instances with her heart and then a fall, we both decided that she should move from her home in California to Roswell to be closer to my family and me. I am glad…

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Lifestyle Management Impacts Dementia

By Miles Hurley | June 1, 2018

Being poor later in life may boost the risk of dementia by 50 percent, new research suggests. “Our study confirms that the risk of dementia is reduced among well-off older people compared with those who have fewer economic resources,” said lead researcher Dorina Cadar, Ph.D., University College London, Department of Behavioral Science and Health. She…

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