One down, one to go!

Today we had our first presentation on recreation therapy. We had it at Stokka Nursing home and it was mostly their staff and a few staff members from other nursing homes in the area. The presentation went really well, everyone was very interested and came up afterwards asking questions and wanting to know more about our interventions and how to make the simple pleasures items. Most of them had never heard of recreation therapy before and are very interested in it. Afterwards we had a small workshop for the people at the presentation. After presenting today and talking about information that I am passionate about has somewhat given me an idea about possibly pursuing a masters degree in gerontology…Not sure but it’s something I want to look further into! Things are going great here, I am missing home and looking forward to being back in the states! I have learned so much here and excited to use it back in the states!

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Start of a new week!

Today we worked at the nursing home. We got lost again on the way there, following maps is harder than it looks! Today Laila (my mentor) and myself went to visit different residents and introduce them to different sensory items. Today we used the tetherball, which is a blown up balloon inside some sewn fabric shaped like a ball. This worked really with small groups of 3 or less residents, we would sit in a circle and toss the ball to each other. Some of the residents had trouble with coordination of catching the ball but this is something that can be improved through regular use of the tether ball. The residents are also responding very well to the wave machines, we have learned however that the salad dressing bottles are too heavy for them to hold, so we are going to make them with smaller bottles. Tomorrow is Norways National Day, almost the whole city will be shut down and there will be parties and parades everywhere! We are helping at a party at the nursing home tomorrow then going to parades in the afternoon. Wednesday I will start using the iPad at the nursing home and see how they respond!

Things are going great here! Miss you all!

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Ready for Pulpit Rock!

We had the day off today, so after sleeping in we explored the city and did some shopping! While we were out we saw some of the Jazz festival going on in downtown and a marching band with some dancing bananas…not really sure what they were doing! We got some ponchos and lovely hats to wear tomorrow for our Pulpit Rock trip, I will definitely look like the ultimate tourist…but that’s ok, I will be dry! Pray for no rain tomorrow!

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Justin Bieber Sardines

Who knew Justin Bieber had his own sardine brand? Today after leaving the nursing home we went on a small tour around the city and one of the nursing home residents was our tour guide. Arnt drove the small bus while he told us about the city and the sites that we saw. One of the first sites we went to was by a small fjord and it has 3 swords in the ground. They represent peace between the Norwegians and the Vikings. We went to a few other sites as well. One of the most interesting was the sardine factory. Stavanger use to be known for its sardines and shipping them out to other countries. We toured the factory and learned about the process of canning sardines. It was very interesting and they had long work days there.

This morning we walked to the nursing home. It is 3.3 km, although we missed one of our streets that we were suppose to turn on and it took us an hour to get there. It wouldn’t have been as bad if it wasn’t raining. But we made it with some help of a nice norwegian man who gave us directions! Things went very well at the nursing home today, I met with about 15 people and showed them the simple pleasures items, such as stuffed fish, butterflies, fleecy hand muffs and wave machines which is a salad dressing bottle with baby oil, colored water, sequins, glitter and some shells inside. They liked the fish and the wave machines the best. They were very interested in them. They were also more receptive to the brighter colored items. Some of the residents were able to focus for longer and were more interested in the items than others. The women were more interested than men. Overall they were very responsive and even showed many signs of reminiscing with the items. One of the ladies we met was very nice and she told us the only english she knows is “Bye, I love you!”. One lady I met and talked to today, she knew some english, she showed me her room and picutes of her family. She is only 72 which is very young to have Alzheimers, and she is very late in the stages of it. This is rare for the residents at the nursing home, most have some form of dementia and are older, most in their 80s. She sat and talked for probly an hour while holding the wave machine and moving it back and forth to watch the items on the inside move.

Tomorrow we have the day off and are probly going shopping and to the Jazz Festival in downtown! Should be a good day!

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First day at Stokka Nursing home

Today was our fist day at the nursing home. We met our “fadder” which translates as a mentor. It is the person we will be shadowing and working with each day. They will also assists us with our interventions. My fadders name is Laila, she is a nurse here but is transitioning into the role of the activities coordinator. I will be doing my intervention tomorrow morning which is sensory integration and I will be using different Simple Pleasures items and meeting with a group of residents and they can pick out which item interests them and talk about it. The goal of these items is to give them something to do in their free time. Also for them to intitiate in an activity themselves during their free time. Today at the nursing home I saw a lot of residents just sitting in the living room without anything to do so I think this will be great for them. Once we leave Stokka they can have a basket in the living room and once the residents know the different items and what they like hopefully they can go on their own and chose an item to help occupy time. These are also great for comfort purposes, to help in agitation, and many other uses with cognition and emotion.

After we returned from the nursing home we went and played at the Geopark which is a park near our apartment that is made out of old oil equipment, it’s hard to describe but it is very neat and fun! For dinner we went to Ingelin’s house. She is one of the nursing home directors and we had a typical Norwegian dinner of shrimp, crab, salad and bread. I had my first experience eating an “open face” sandwich, which you also eat with a fork and knife…not you hands and some white wine which was probably one of the best white wines I have tried yet! For dessert we had some strawberry cake, they said an old Norwegian saying that if your cake stood up on the plate that you would be getting married soon…mine fell over so I guess I won’t be getting married anytime soon haha.

Thing are going great here! Still adjusting to the time change. We are 6 hours ahead of America. I slept 11 hours last night and still did not want to get out of bed this morning!

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Finally Made It!

After 15 hours of traveling we finally made it to Stavanger! Everything went well until trying to leave from New York, we were lined up for take-off when a passenger asked to get off the plane because she was feeling sick. So we had to turn around and go back to the gate and also wait for them to find her bag amongst the 200 other bags below deck. So we ended up leaving an hour late. When we landed in Amsterdam we got stuck in line at security, ran to our gate and got there right at 7:15, our departure time. But unfortunately we were 10 minutes late and missed our flight. But we were definitely blessed by the airport staff, particuarly this one women who rebooked our flight for us at 9:35am, and checked us in our flights, she also gave us each a 5 euro stipen to get a drink and snack, and a 5 minute calling card. That’s what I call service! She was so nice and helpful!

When we got to our apartment we cleaned up, took an hour nap and then went to the nursing home for dinner and a tour. It is a lot different than American nursing homes, it’s much more modern. I really wish I knew Norwegian because there was a sweet old lady talking to me and I could not understand anything she said. We also met Helmot one of the roosters (they have about 10) who lives in the yard at the nursing home. It’s going to be a great week! Tomorrow we are shadowing at the nursing home and getting to know the residents to find out who will be a good fit for our different programs!

Everyone is so nice and friendly, the nursing home staff are amazing and so helpful!

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Using the Apple iPad as a Recreation Therapy Intervention

This is a summary of my experience this past semester using the iPad as an intervention with a nusing home resident whom we will call “Tom”. Tom had a stroke 6 years ago and is completely non-verbal. He currently communicates using a thumbs up for yes and thumbs down for no. I am currently reteaching him the alphabet and word formation using the Doodle app on the iPad. He has lost the fine motor ability to use a pencil but it able to write out most letters and small words using his finger. This is an exert from my case study:

The Apple iPad is new to the idea of treatment of people with disabilities. Finding research and articles on this topic were slim and some untrustworthy. My main focus of research on this topic is from FutureAge Care. FutureAge Care is a Christian-based organization that provides services to the aging community. Their focus is “lifestyle and leisure”, diversional therapy, and any additional support needed. Their services include music, sound and multisensory enrichment programs for adults and the elderly. Jennifer Freeman who has been using and conducting most of the research using the iPad with clients said “The iPad presents a variety of uses and potential benefits within recreation therapy, occupational therapy, speech pathology and wellbeing for clients.” The iPad has many different uses and is a multisensory tool that can be used for many different client goals. With the surplus amount of apps you can find on iTunes you can cater them to your clients’ interests. This makes the iPad a highly person-centered device. Some advantages of the iPad include its large touch screen, which is very useful with clients who may have limited movement. Its multisensory appeal: visual, audio, tactile. It’s portable and lightweight, can be used bedside, positioned in their lap, or on a table. Another advantage is many of the apps are free, or low cost. The iPad can also be used for documentation of observations. After finding this information I contacted Jennifer Freeman for more information, she told me about different apps she has used on clients with a history of strokes. These included Phrase Board, Pocket Pond, Gravitarium, Doodle Buddy, and Fuji Leaves.

            I did not know what to expect in using the iPad with Tom. For the first session I started out by showing it to him, I pulled up some of the pictures and we looked through them together and I talked about them and asked him questions about the photos. I then pulled up the map and zoomed in on the United States and asked him where he was from. He directly pointed to San Antonio, Texas which is where he is from. I then asked him where he lives now and he pointed to North Carolina. The next time I pulled up pictures again but this time I let him use his fingers to transition through the photos. This was a good way to work on problem solving. He had a hard time in moving some of the photos across the screen, but with repeated attempts he was able to figure it out. During that session I also pulled up pictures online of San Antonio, Texas and asked him questions about them. Such as if he remembered those places and if he had been there before. He enjoyed looking at the photos of San Antonio. Some things I observed during these first two sessions were that Tom was not as “fidgety” one time I walked into the room and he was trying to get out of his bed and once I began to show him pictures on the iPad he relaxed and focused on that and not longer tried to get out of the bed. It was a good way to redirect his attention to something else. During the third session I had him draw on the Doodle App, and each time I would change the color for him he would try to only draw over areas he had already drawn on. The fourth session I used the Pocket Pond App. This app is basically a virtual pond with water and koi fish, and each time you touch the screen it makes a water splashing noise. Tom enjoyed using app, every time a fish would swim out he would touch it, then it would swim away and he would go on to the next. This is good for visual coordination and sensory. After that I pulled up the Doodle App and asked Tom to draw the letter A, he immediately did so and went through the letter H without me prompting him with what the next letter is. He drew out the entire alphabet. I then pulled up a new page and asked him to write out his name, he wrote his first and last name with only one spelling error in his last name. On the next page I asked him to write out how he felt that day, I was not able to make out the words he wrote. So I ended the session by drawing 3 faces depicting different feelings; happy, sad and indifferent. I asked him which of those he was feeling at the moment and he chose the smiling face. It took time but we found something that works for him. For the next couple weeks I am planning on working on relearning the alphabet and then putting together short words. This has been a very successful intervention with Tom. Below are three of the picture I discussed above. I took out the one with his name.

            In conclusion, the iPad was useful in beginning to meet the goals I set for Tom. We began to bring in a new way of communication for him, but it still needs improvement. Our sessions in the beginning lasted 20 minutes but in our last session we met for 45 minutes, so his ability to concentrate for longer periods of time improved. If I would have had the ability to meet with him three times a week for about 30 minutes each time that his progress would have been greater and quicker. Due to time constraints that was not possible, but is something to take into consideration for future research. This is a good first step in helping Tom meet his goal of a more efficient way of communication.

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