DYING: A Book of Comfort

Companion website about dying, bereavement, loss, grief — and aging with spirit

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Managing life for aging and disabled patients

All those steps taken to help disabled people become enormously relevant when we are pregnant, are temporarily disabled after an accident (try ­naviga­ting stairs with a broken limb), or begin to experience the surprising number of disabilities that may accrue as we age. Life is different when you can’t see or hear as well or get around with the same physical ease you once had. Luckily many aids and support programs are available. Check them out. If you don’t know where to begin, try the useful directory of topics at Family Village.

• Equipment, services, and advice
• Legal matters



EQUIPMENT, SERVICES, AND ADVICE

Abledata (objective information about assistive technology products and rehabilitation equipment available from domestic and international sources)

Abuse and disability (Family Village links)

Accessible Web page design (for those serving disabled readers)

Alzheimer’s Association Carefinder a

Alzheimer’s Store

Americans with Disabilities Act home page

Answers for families (Nebraska site that may be generally helpful)

Assistivetech.net (searchable database on assistive technology (AT) and disability-related information)

Babyboomer demand boosting universal home design (Realty Times)

Bathroom design (AARP)

Bathroom safety checklist (AARP)

CAST (Center for Aging Services Technologies, some useful links for disabled or older people)

Checklist for safety, lighting, and storage (AARP)

DisabilityInfo.gov (online resource for Americans with disabilities)

Disaster preparedness for people with special needs (Red Cross)

Discussion groups and chat rooms about specific problems (assistivetech.net)

Doctors say medication overused in dementia (AARP Bulletin)

Doors, floors, and hallways (AARP’s checklist for accessibility)

Eldercare locator (you can download their useful booklets on transportation and housing options)

Family Support 360 Initiative (providing grants to local service providers to help families with developmental disabilities)

*Family Village (a global community for disability-related resources)

Independent Living Centers (a directory)

Independent Living Institute (promoting disabled people’s self-determination)

International Longevity Center (navigating the age boom)

Leonardo’s Laptop (Ben Shneiderman interview about human needs and computer design)

National Clearinghouse for Long-Term Care Information

*National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (Library of Congress, free library program of braille and audio materials circulated to eligible borrowers in the United States by postage-free mail)

Network of care

Talking Book Program (Library of Congress, answers to frequently asked questions)

Universal home design (AARP)

Vocational rehabilitation




Dying: A Book of Comfort,
ed. Pat McNees

“Seldom have I read a book that exudes such comfort, such an embrace of genuine insight, care and support....The book’s gift, and it is a rich treasure for the reader, is that it embraces who we are.... The book can be read cover to cover, or just pick out a page. Something will leap off the page, a story, a quote, a reading, narrative couplings of diverse themes colorfully worded by the author/scribe, to give you the needed word or embrace....This book needs wide circulation. The bereaved deserve this, and the book will help all of us.”
~ Rev. Richard B. Gilbert, director, World Pastoral Care Center, in Resources Hotline



Created by The Authors Guild

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