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:: Magnetic Attraction

:: Kids’ Headaches, Migraines Increase as New School Year Begins

:: More Fun With Sisters And Brothers: Kids Learn To Handle Emotional Responses To Siblings

:: Study Shows “Free Play” Is Highly Important To Human Social Development

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:: Pediatric Ritalin Use May Affect Developing Brain

:: Criteria Developed to Detect Bone Mass Deficiencies in Children

:: Redefining the Scope

:: A Communication Barrier to Pediatric Care

:: The Bone Information Collectors

:: Training Curbs Anger And Aggression In Adolescents With Tourette Syndrome

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:: Reel Results

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:: How Language Impairments Affect Child’s Story Telling

:: Infants Should Be Screened For Hip Trouble

:: Striking Effects of Stress

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:: The High Impact of Low Impact

:: Exercise Helps Children Fall Asleep Faster, Study Indicates

:: Humans Appear Hardwired to Learn by “Over-Imitation”

:: Federal Resources for Children Face Challenges

:: PT Stars in New Video Series

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:: A Sweet Alzheimer's Prevention

:: Baby Talk

:: Early Bird Gets the Word

:: A Lot to Swallow

:: Asthmatic Teens Welcome Web-based Management

:: The Healthy Senior

:: Crossing International Lines

:: Risk Takers Lower Risk of Parkinson’s

:: Children Of Undocumented Parents May Be At Higher Developmental Risk

:: Hormone Activity Explains Adolescent Mood Swings

:: One-Third of U.S. Children Regularly Take Dietary Supplements

:: Use Your Brain, Halve Your Risk Of Dementia

:: Use Your Head Gear

:: American Lung Association Urges Parents Of Kids With Asthma To Prepare For Flu Season & New School Year Ahead

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:: While You Were Sleeping

:: Needing Some Space

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:: Future Climate Change Likely To Cause More Respiratory Problems In Young Children

:: New Groundbreaking Treatment For Oxygen-Deprived Newborns

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:: The Sound Benefits of Music

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:: While You Were Sleeping

:: One Therapist, Under Law

:: Dietary Supplement Can Turn the Skin Permanently Blue

:: High Number Of Infant Deaths Linked To Unsafe Sleeping Conditions

:: No Bones About This Connection

:: Listen Up

:: Collaborative Care Evolutions

:: Is Your Spouse Making You Sick?

:: Surgeons Team Provide Young Woman With “New Back”

:: Children with Brain-Damage Often Have Cold Feet

:: Therapets

:: Talk the Talk

:: Doctors’ Tests Often Miss High Blood Pressure in Kids with Kidney Disease

:: Out-of-Shape Kids the Norm

:: Antidepressant Ineffective Against Autism Spectrum Disorder Children’s Obsessive Behavior

:: Brain Food

:: Quitting Time

:: More Than 30 Percent of Common Children's Vision Disorders Missed

:: Spiritual Healing

:: The Healthy Senior

:: Getting Out of the Healthcare Fog

:: Device Advice

:: Normalizing School-Based Therapy

:: A Resounding Goal

:: Immigrant Children Sluggishly Scale Language Barrier

:: Unlocking Doors to Dementia

:: Kicking up New Research on Pediatric Soccer Injuries

:: Therapy on Four Legs

:: Helping Children Get Chatty

:: Natural Resources

:: Classroom of the Future to Reshape Young Waistlines

:: Lower the Resistance

:: Food for Thought

:: Study Reveals Barriers to Pain Treatment in Children with Sickle Cell Disease

:: Planting The Seeds For Rehabilitation

:: Building Baby Brain Connections

:: Monkeys Use ‘Baby Talk’ to Interact with Infants

:: Children at Play

:: New Risks to Smokers' Children Revealed

:: New National Study Finds Increase In P.E. Class-Related Injuries

:: Block-Play May Improve Toddler Language Development

:: Getting to the Root of Stuttering

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:: Diagnosis Of Swallowing Disorder In Children

:: Newborns: Can You Hear Me Now?

:: Head Injury Greater in High School Football

:: Staggering Pediatric SCI Stats

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:: Brightening the Golden Years

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:: Kids with Special Needs Face Bumpy Transition to Adult Healthcare

:: OHSU researchers study speech and language disorders in autism

:: Baby Talk Is Universal

:: Children’s Early Skills Predict Later School Success

:: Thumb Arthritis Under OT's Thumb

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:: Inhaled nitric oxide protects premies

:: Convenience of Retail Clinics Drawing More Kids in for Care

:: A Pain in the Neck Treatment

:: New Year, New You

:: When Babies Learn Language, the Eyes Have It

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:: Preview 2020 Sharpens Focus on APTA’s Vision

:: Physicians Support New Immunizations, Urge Children To Get Vaccinations

:: Childhood Brain Tumors Leave a Lasting Mark on Cognition

:: The Healthy Senior

:: Pointing the Way to Drugs for Deadly Childhood Leukemia

:: In-utero Alcohol Exposure Affects 'Booze Behavior'

:: Culturally Speaking

:: Farm Therapy

:: Expert Serves up the Skinny on Healthy and Fun School Lunches

:: It’s Not All in Your Head

:: The Healthy Senior

:: Experts Cite Pediatric Pain, Palliative Care Shortcomings

:: Is Surgery The Best Answer For Children With Sleep Apnea?

:: Behind the Name

:: Low Birth Weight, High Risk for Hyperactivity

:: Don't Let Stress Get the Best of Your Age

:: Getting to the Root of Rett

:: Exposure to phthalates may be a risk factor for low birth weight in infants

:: Pediatric Strokes More Than Twice as Common

:: Imaging Study Finds Evidence Of Social Orienting Ability Associated With Brain Abnormalities In Toddlers With Autism

:: Food for Physicians' Thoughts

:: Some Children are Born with Temporary Deafness

:: Pulmonary Expert Comments on Lung Transplants Study

:: A Challenging Generation

:: Educational Home Visits Can Improve Asthma in Children

:: Adult Automated External Defibrillators Save Children’s Lives

:: Childhood Vaccines and Autism: No Scientific Link Found

:: The Healthy Senior

:: Childhood Social Skills Linked to Learning Abilities

:: Going the Extra Smile for a Longer Life

:: Strengthening Stroke Survivor Speech Skills

:: An Eye for an Eye Movement

:: Addressing Stigma of Pediatric Mental Health Conditions

:: Hypothermic Technique for Treating Pediatric Head Injuries

:: Parents fail to protect children from exposure to tobacco smoke

:: Gesturing Helps Grade-Schoolers Solve Math Problems

:: Guideline: Kids with Small Head Size at Risk of Neurologic Problems, Screening Needed

:: Toying Around

:: Newborn Blood Data Used To Study Cerebral Palsy

:: No Cognitive Benefit From TV Viewing Before The Age Of 2

:: The Healthy Senior

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:: New Orleans’ Ochsner Introduces Literacy Program to Promote Healthy Minds

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:: The Healthy Senior

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:: Walking on Water

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:: Setting a New Standard for Dementia Care

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The Healthy Senior


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The Healthy Senior
Grandkids are bundles of joy – and germs
By Fred Cicetti
02.10.06

Article available online at: http://www.therapytimes.com/021006SENIORS


Q. Do grandparents get more colds than seniors without grandchildren?

I was unable to find any specific data on grandparents and colds. However, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) reports that, in families with children in school, the number of colds per child can be as high as 12 a year. NIAID also reports that all people older than 60 average less than one cold a year.

Put those over-60-year-old individuals in those homes with school children and it doesn’t take a mathematician to figure out that the number of colds in grandparents will jump significantly.

Any grandparent will tell you that being around their little treasures has made them sick. My five pre-school grandchildren are generous with all the viruses they get from their friends at daycare and play. My personal physician, also a grandfather, says that one of the problems is that these walking Petri dishes come up with new germs older people haven’t developed antibodies for.

What are you supposed to do when one of the darlings comes up to you with a runny nose and asks for a hug? Well, if you understand the hazards, perhaps you can formulate a plan that works for you around the treasured children of your children. Obviously, the best course of action is to stay away from grandchildren when they have colds, but any grandparent knows that’s next to impossible.

There are two ways you can catch a cold:

1. Inhaling drops of mucus full of cold germs from the air.
2. Touching a surface that has cold germs and then touching your eyes, nose or mouth. So, avoid close facial contact with your ailing grandchildren. Use some restraint. If the child needs comfort, limit yourself to hugs that don’t put you in the position of inhaling their germs.

Washing your hands thoroughly and often is important. Washing with soap and water doesn't kill the cold virus, but removes it. The scrubbing is more important than the soap. Also, if you can, try to avoid touching your face after you have been around a child with a cold.

Rhinoviruses can live up to three hours on your skin, and on objects such as telephones and stair railings. Cleaning environmental surfaces with a virus-killing disinfectant might help prevent spread of infection.

Where are these viruses found most often? Surprisingly, not in the bathroom. The worst room in the house for germs is the kitchen. And the greatest concentration is found in sponges and dishcloths.

Laundering a dishcloth doesn’t eliminate germs. And putting a sponge through the dishwasher makes it look clean, but doesn’t remove the infection. Instead, moisten the sponge or dishcloth and microwave it for two minutes. Then you'll have safe, germ-free tools to use.

These tips will help, but the reality is that you’re going to catch some colds. They’re the price of being a caregiver. It’s the price you paid as a parent. Now you’re having a second chance for all that love ... and all those germs.


With experience as a freelance writer and publicist for major pharmaceutical companies, such as Eli Lilly, Johnson & Johnson, Merck and Pfizer, Fred Cicetti is now a New Jersey-based columnist writing about a variety of senior health issues. His opinions and views do not necessarily reflect those of Therapy Times or Valley Forge Publishing Group. Questions or comments can be directed to editorial@TherapyTimes.com.

All Rights Reserved © 2006 by Fred Cicetti


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AccuMed Technology Solutions at CSM 2010
Bill Cummins, MS, CCC-SLP, discusses the Cypress Therapy software from AccuMed Technology Solutions, which provides a library of documentation templates, including daily notes, weekly summaries, initial and monthly plans of progress, and discipline-specific evaluations, as well as Cypress Mobile software in which therapists enter treatment data as they work with patients, running on any handheld device using the Windows Mobile® operating system Cypress Therapy software integrates, manages, and displays information for therapists, managers, and business office staff.
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