Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Sign up for Safe Return services. Don’t wait to be asked to help a fellow caregiver who is struggling. Seek outside assistance with caregiving. Bring your family member with AD to the doctor regularly. Find a caregivers’ support group.

Answer: Wandering can be a major issues for patients with AD. If wandering is a concern, sign up for a service provided by MedicAlert and Safe Return, which is a network for locating a person with AD who is lost. The service provides ID cards and jewelry with a 24-hour emergency toll-free number so that, when found, the person can be reunited with their family. You can also call the number if you find that your loved one is missing, which activates the search network. Local Alzheimer's Association chapters and law enforcement agencies will be notified so they can help look for the missing person.You can lean more here: https://www.alz.org/care/dementia-medic-alert-safe-return.asp When you need some help or time away, ask for it; when you sense that another caregiver needs the same, offer your help.  Working as a team means anticipating needs and offering whatever contributions you can to support the larger goal. As members of the same family and caregivers for the same loved one, set aside petty differences whenever possible and approach each other with compassion and understanding.  Do what you can to help each other, which is certainly what your loved one with AD would have wanted of you. No matter how good your intentions, how great your energy levels, and how determined you are to see things through as a family, the time may well come when caring for an Alzheimer’s patient is simply too much for your family group.  There is absolutely no shame in this.  Always focus on what is best for your loved one with AD, even if that means turning over some amount of care to trained professionals.  Outside assistance options for AD patients include but are not limited to:  Respite care providers, who will provide full-time care for your loved one for a predetermined (short) period of time, so that you and other family members can get some rest and energy. Meal service providers, who bring prepared food to your loved one’s home on a regular schedule. Adult day care programs, which supervise activities for AD patients according to an established schedule. Home healthcare providers, who can provide services ranging from occasional home visits to 24/7 in-home care. Geriatric care managers, who make regular home visits and offer care suggestions and assistance in coordinating needed services. Bring your loved one to the doctor every 2-4 weeks, especially in the early stages of treatment. In these sessions, the doctor may still be adjusting medication and answering your questions. After those initial stages, bring your loved one to the doctor every 3-6 months. The doctor will be assessing your family member with AD in different areas: activities of daily living, cognition, comorbid medical and mood disorders, and caregiver status. The doctor will also be assessing your family, helping you cope, and directing you to resources. They will do their best to help you cope with and manage your stress about your family member with AD. You can find comfort, support, and assistance within your family group of caregivers, but sometimes it may be easier to seek out these things from strangers going through the same type of thing as you.  With the growing number of cases of AD, there is also a growing number of available AD caregiver support groups.  Don't wait to be asked to help. Try to help your family members whenever you can. Sometimes, even simple things, like helping with chores or taking a walk with your loved one, can make the burden of other caretakers feel much lighter. You want to give other caregivers time to recharge, too. Talk to your loved one’s care team for advice on local caregiver support groups.  You can also search for groups online and/or join online support groups.  Start your search on recognized sites dedicated to Alzheimer’s care, such as https://www.alz.org/.


Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Request the septic tank location information from your county Health Department. Get in touch with the contractor who built the house. Ask your neighbors where their septic tanks are located. Inquire with the house’s previous owners. Ask local septic companies if they’ve pumped the tank before.

Answer: The Health Departments of counties throughout the U.S. keep detailed housing records, which include the locations of each house’s septic tank. Reach out to the Health Department for a copy of this information.  You can find the phone number, physical address, or email address of your county’s Health Department online. For example, if you live in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, you can find their septic-tank request form here: https://www.aahealth.org/request-for-copies-of-septic-or-well-records/. If your house was built within the last 5-10 years, the contractor may remember off the top of their head. If your house is older, it’s still likely that the contractor will have a diagram showing where your septic tank is located. Ask them to access this diagram and let you know about the tank’s location. The best way to find the contractor’s name or company is to look on old blueprints or any other documents that you (or the original owner) kept from when the house was first built. If your house and yard are structured similarly to others in your subdivision, your septic tanks may be the same direction and distance away from your respective houses. Talk to 2 or 3 of your neighbors and ask them where their tanks are located. If your neighbors are generous with their time, they may be willing to walk out in their yard and show you the exact location where their tank is buried. If you know who owned your house before you, contact them and ask if they remember the location of the septic tank. If they lived in the house for more than 4 or 5 years, odds are they had the septic tank drained and will remember its location. Even if they don’t remember the tank’s exact location, they may be able to inform you which side of the house it’s on, or how far away from the house it’s buried. If you have lived in the house for less than five years, but are unable to contact the previous owner, it’s possible that they had the septic tank pumped but did not pass this information on to you. However, the local septic company may remember the tank’s location. Place a phone call to the septic companies which service your area and ask if they’ve ever pumped the tank. Septic companies keep detailed records of where tanks are located, so if they’ve pumped the tank at your house before, they’ll know exactly where it’s located.


Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Click on the File Tab on top left corner of the window. Click on "Option" button, which is adjacent to the Exit button. Click on Save from the Excel Option window, which is in left side panel. Leave the Save files in this format: Select the Save AutoRecover information every XX minutes check box. Put 1 minute at that time box. Leave the AutoRecover file location as it is. Leave the Default file location as it is, if you want to change your default file location, then change here. Click on OK button at bottom left part adjacent to Cancel button.

Answer: as it is, if don't want AutoSave your work in any other format. Default is Excel Workbook.  Default is 14 minutes. Default is "C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\Application Data\Microsoft\Excel\", if Administrator is the user who logged in. Default is "C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\My Documents", if Administrator is the user who logged in.


Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Pay attention to your non-verbal cues. Resist the urge to overgeneralize. Use "I" statements instead of "You" statements. Listen Manage how you react to the other person's words. Don't hold them hostage, manipulate them, or otherwise withdraw from the situation. Never practice mind-reading and don't jump to conclusions. Don't play the blame game.

Answer:
Most conflicts are mediated through language, but that doesn't mean that the only thing you need to pay attention to is the phrasing of your words — which are, by the way, important. Pay attention to the way you carry yourself — your posture, the tone of your voice, your eye contact. Like it or not, these things communicate more than you think about your willingness to resolve the conflict:  Keep your posture "open." Don't slouch, sit with your arms crossed, or face the other way. Don't fidget with something like you're bored. Sit or stand with your shoulders back, your arms at your sides, and facing the subject at all times.    {"smallUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikihow.com\/images\/thumb\/a\/ab\/Deal-With-Conflict-Step-5Bullet1.jpg\/v4-460px-Deal-With-Conflict-Step-5Bullet1.jpg","bigUrl":"\/images\/thumb\/a\/ab\/Deal-With-Conflict-Step-5Bullet1.jpg\/aid1851123-v4-728px-Deal-With-Conflict-Step-5Bullet1.jpg","smallWidth":460,"smallHeight":345,"bigWidth":"728","bigHeight":"546","licensing":"<div class=\"mw-parser-output\"><p>License: <a rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external text\" href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-nc-sa\/3.0\/\">Creative Commons<\/a><br>\n<\/p><p><br \/>\n<\/p><\/div>"}  Keep eye contact with the other person. Show them that you're interested in what they're saying by being alert and showing concern in your face.    {"smallUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikihow.com\/images\/thumb\/1\/11\/Deal-With-Conflict-Step-5Bullet2.jpg\/v4-460px-Deal-With-Conflict-Step-5Bullet2.jpg","bigUrl":"\/images\/thumb\/1\/11\/Deal-With-Conflict-Step-5Bullet2.jpg\/aid1851123-v4-728px-Deal-With-Conflict-Step-5Bullet2.jpg","smallWidth":460,"smallHeight":345,"bigWidth":"728","bigHeight":"546","licensing":"<div class=\"mw-parser-output\"><p>License: <a rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external text\" href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-nc-sa\/3.0\/\">Creative Commons<\/a><br>\n<\/p><p><br \/>\n<\/p><\/div>"}  If you're on friendly terms with the person, don't be afraid to give them a reassuring, gentle touch on the arm. Literally reaching out to them is a sign on sensitivity and can even activate an opioid region in the brain responsible for maintaining social connectedness! Over-generalisation is dangerous because suddenly you're attacking the whole individual rather than something they occasionally do. It's a much bigger battle, and people take the threat a lot more seriously. Instead of saying "You always cut me off and never let me finish my sentence," try going with the more diplomatic "Please don't interrupt me; I let you finish talking and I'd appreciate the same courtesy." This accomplishes two things. First, it semantically makes the problem less about them and more about you, inviting less defensive behavior from them. Second, it helps explain the situation better, letting the other person understand where you're coming from.  Use the following formula when crafting an "I" statement: "I feel like [emotion] when you [describe their behavior] because [give your reason]." An example of a good "I" statement might look like this: "I feel put down when you ask me to clean up the dishes like that because I've spent the better half of the day preparing a nice meal for us and I never get any acknowledgment from you." for the things that really matter for the other person, and respond to them. Don't derail the train by getting sidetracked on the small stuff. Listen to the other person's complaints, focus in on the truly important underlying message, and try to address it. If the other person doesn't feel like you're ready to deal with the heart of their message, they're very likely going to escalate the conflict or simply tune out and abandon any attempt to resolve it. Like begets like, so reacting the right way ensures a friendly exchange instead of a heated outburst.  How not to react to the other person: Angrily, hurtfully, heatedly, or resentfully  How to react to the other person: Calmly, thoughtfully, non-defensively, and respectfully These are big no-nos, and a lot of us do them without even knowing that we do them. We can hold other people hostage by withdrawing love, for example, and refusing to show affection until we've gotten what we want. We can manipulate them by shaming them, for example, and criticizing their need to talk about something that we think is petty or inconsequential. We can withdraw from the situation by refusing to listen to what they are actually saying, for example, and By focusing on minor points instead of the major thrust. All of these things communicate something very clear to the other person: That we're not interested in making the situation better, that we only want what's good for us, not what's good for both. This is a death sentence to successful conflict resolution. We all hate the person who constantly finishes our sentences for us, because the assumption is that he knows what we're feeling better than we do. Even if you feel like you understand what the person is saying and where they're coming from, let them say it themselves. It's important, both for catharsis and communication, that they feel completely in control. Don't be the know-it-all Houdini who can't keep his mouth shut enough to actually engage with what the other person is saying. When we feel attacked by another person, we usually lash out at them in self-defense. Because the best defense is a good offense, right? This is a refrain that couples, for example, know all too well: I'm frustrated that you didn't follow through with what you said you'd do. You knew I wanted the house to be clean before my parents came. Well, you have no right to feel frustrated. I had planned out this day months ahead, and what's a little dirt going to hurt, anyway? You're the one who's always carrying these crazy expectations. Do you see what's going on here? The one spouse is getting frustrated, and the other spouse is blaming them for being frustrated in the first blame. Well, you probably know how this conflict is going to end: With the one spouse taking offense at the blame game, and suddenly the argument isn't about following through with promises, it's about really deep-seated issues that are blown apart by the circumstances of the argument.