Click Here to Download our NEW Mobile App!
2400 32nd Avenue South, Fargo, ND 58103 | Phone: (701) 234-9912 | Fax: (701) 297-0807 | Mon-Fri: 8a.m.-6:p.m. | Sat: 9a.m.-1p.m. | Sun: Closed

Manténgase sano!

Resultados de su búsqueda "Home Healthcare".

Resultados de noticias de salud - 11

Many Americans like the idea of receiving hospital-level care at home, believing they'd recover from their ills faster and without safety risks. 

"Patients of course want the best-quality care, but often prefer to be at home, especially if technology allows them to work closely with their physician toward recovery," said study leader

  • Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter
  • |
  • July 10, 2024
  • |
  • Página completa
  • Vicki Bickford is a professional caregiver, but lately she's been worried more and more about her own aging.

    Bickford, 66, has aggressive arthritis that has required hip replacements and has now spread to her knees, as well as degenerative disc disease in her spine.

    She's made modifications to help her stay in her home -- sliding glass doors, a ramp, a day basement -- but it has cos...

    Alzheimer's robs its victims of their memories and there is no cure, but there are things you can do to prevent Alzheimer's disease.

    With Alzheimer's, two types of brain proteins, called tau tangles and beta-amyloid plaques, grow out of control. According to Harvard Health, these proteins destroy brain cells and cause

  • Kirstie Ganobsik HealthDay Reporter
  • |
  • June 19, 2023
  • |
  • Página completa
  • Over the last decade, an aging American population has increasingly turned away from nursing homes in favor of trained caregivers who can provide critical help in the home with basic daily tasks.

    But a new investigation warns the need for at-home care has vastly outpaced a much smaller growth in the pool of home care workers.

    The result: between 2013 and 2019, the number of availabl...

    Millions of Americans get around with the help of wheelchairs, from those born with disabilities to those who have been struck with disabilities later in life.

    Home is a sanctuary for many -- a place where comfort, safety and ease are especially important -- so remodeling a house for wheelchair access makes sense.

    Like with any renovation project, when remodeling for wheelchair acce...

    Regular home monitoring can help with blood pressure control, but only half of people who have hypertension or other related conditions actually do it, a new study found.

    Of Americans ages 50 to 80 who take blood pressure me...

    The vast majority of aging Americans want to stay in their homes and live independently for as long as possible, but many haven't considered what needs to be done to achieve "aging in place," a new poll reveals.

    Nearly 9 in 10 Americans (88%) between 50 and 80 years of ag...

    The pandemic has worsened longstanding staffing shortages at U.S. nursing homes and other long-term care facilities. Now, a new study shows that high employee turnover rates have yet to improve.

    Researchers found that after initial workforce losses in the early phase of the pandemic, U.S. ...

    Need in-home health care? Know this: The quality of your care may depend on where you live.

    That's the takeaway from a new study from New York University that gave agencies in urban areas high marks for keeping patients out of the hospital. It found that home health agencies in rural areas, meanwhile, get care started sooner.

    "Our study highlights the persistence of disparities in q...

    They take care of others, but many U.S. home health care workers say they're not in good shape themselves, a new study finds.

    Researchers analyzed self-reported data collected from nearly 3,000 home health care workers in 38 states between 2014 and 2018 and found that more than a quarter rated their general health as fair or poor, 1 in 5 reported poor mental health, and 14% reported poor ...

    It helps to speak English if you're a home care patient in the United States.

    A new study of home health care found that patients who speak a language other than English have higher rates of hospital readmission.

    Readmission rates among New York City patients whose first language wasn't English were highest among Spanish and Russian speakers. They were lower among Chinese and K...