408-854-1883 starts at $30 per hr home care

Affordable in home care | starts at $28 per hr

Bay area Senior Care Finder 408-854-1883

There are other choices in the Senior Care service Industry other than in-home caregiving services. Motherhealth – Bay area Senior Care Finder 408-854-1883 helps families find assisted living and other senior housing options for bay area seniors. We refer our clients to top in-home care providers or assisted living communities and receive a commission each time our client chooses one of our providers’ services.

We feel good in knowing that we made a difference in someone’s life and earned an income in return.

Founded in 2004 by a health educator and RCFE care home administrator, Connie Dello Buono after working with many caregivers in care homes and nursing home, Motherhealth – Bay area Senior Care Finder 408-854-1883 is the connector for bay area senior placement industry.

Motherhealth – Bay area Senior Care Finder 408-854-1883 assists seniors and their families with the difficult task of identifying the most appropriate residential facility or in-home care service in their area.

We are contracted with dozens of providers (care homes and senior facilities) in the bay area and are paid every time a client is placed with one of them. The service is completely free to clients as our service are paid directly by the providers. It’s a business in which each party benefits and feels tremendous satisfaction every time the service is performed.

The senior placement business model has significant advantages over the home care operations that have become so popular over the past decade. In addition to a much lower initial investment, without the ongoing expense, headache,  the total overhead and ease of operation is almost incomparable.

Our marketing program distributes referrals provided by both headquarters and other franchisees for a 30% fee to the source (nurses, discharge planners, social workers, and other agencies or families) on paid accounts.

We are expanding to have online presence and a mobile application, investing partners are welcome. Email Connie at motherhealth@gmail.com

card motherhealth

cropped-logo-motherhealth-final1.jpg

 

When you need senior home options

As you age and have surgery or need to move out from your home to be cared for 24/7, you have to research your options.

When you want an apartment like setting, with a big dining area, a concierge, you choose assisted living facilities or senior apartments (high end with on call nursing staff).

When you need to be rehabilitated and be cared for by nurses and physical therapists 24/7, you choose nursing facilities.

When you want to live with others in a board and care called care homes or residential care facilities for the elderly (RCFE), you choose a care home.

When you need a home health aid, caregiver, personal helper, home helper in any of the above facilities, you are seeking a caregiver (at times they are working for a home care agency or nursing care agency).

There are many transitions in our lives. Our families may or may not be with us but we connect with others to live the quality of life that we want.

So save now, for at times the choices we have are based on our financial capacity.

Take care of your health now so that you will not be limited to live the life you want. Not be limited by a wheel chair or other health issues, for your daily life can still be full of things to learn and explore and be shared with another.

Email Connie at motherhealth@gmail.com or call 408-854-1883 for caring bay area caregivers with Motherhealth.

new caregivers brochure motherhealth

care 1

Palo Alto Online

GRAB BAG

Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Palo Alto, has led a group of more than 70 Congressional members against President Donald Trump’s request to gather voter data from states for the Advisory Commission on Election Integrity, which held its first meeting Wednesday. The elected leaders signed an eight-page letter stating their concerns that releasing names, addresses, dates of birth and other highly sensitive information may put people at risk of identity theft and hacks. “The federal government has an obligation to protect the private information of Americans, but this request for personal voter data does the exact opposite,” Eshoo said in a press release.

TOP STORIESfrom the Palo Alto Weekly and the Palo Alto Online staff

Rape reported at Stanford student residence
The Stanford University Department of Public Safety is investigating an alleged rape that occurred a… (Thursday, 8:22 AM)

Maybell Avenue development moves ahead
A developer’s plan to build 16 homes on a former orchard site on Maybell Avenue scored a major victo… (Thursday, 9:53 AM)

Around Town: staged protest; downtown retail
In this week’s Around Town column, find out why the city has butt heads with the San Francisco Mime … (Thursday, 9:15 AM)

Pastor pleads not guilty to child molestation
A pastor from East Palo Alto pleaded not guilty Tuesday to allegations that he molested three minors… (Wednesday, 1:50 PM)

• Palo Alto Online Home Page

HOT PICKSMust-see events recommended by our A&E editors

TODAY’S EVENTS (JULY 20)

Concert: Jacknife: the Music of Jackie McLean
The Jazz Mentor Fellows are selected from nearly 200 applicants from all over the country to teach at the Workshop’s summer education programs. This year’s Mentor Fellows feature a swinging rhythm section and virtuosic horns. On the same evening, San Francisco saxophonist Steven Lugerner continues his explorations of the music of jazz legend Jackie McLean with Jacknife, a hard-hitting post-bop quintet, tonight, July 20, 7:30-9:30 p.m. at Dinkelspiel Auditorium, 471 Lagunita Drive, Stanford. Go to arts.stanford.edu.

Live Music: Music On the Plaza
Live music returns to downtown Palo Alto for six summer concerts at Lytton Plaza, tonight, July 20, 6-8 p.m. at Lytton Plaza, 202 University Ave., Palo Alto. Go to facebook.com.

Talk: Vinod Khosla: The Future of Technology
Vinod Khosla, entrepreneur, investor and founder of Khosla Ventures will discuss how to harness the entrepreneurial spirit to develop the clean technologies that are desperately needed, tonight, July 20, 7-8 p.m. at Oshman Family JCC, 3921 Fabian Way, Palo Alto. Go to eventbrite.com.

TOMORROW’S EVENTS (JULY 21)

Concert: Jazz Camp Showcase 1
The free Stanford Jazz Camp Showcase features over 200 kids having the time of their lives, playing in bands and improvising, on four stages. In this action-packed community event, young musicians demonstrate the vocal and instrumental skills they’ve learned after spending a week immersed in Jazz Camp, tomorrow, July 21, 6-8 p.m. at Dinkelspiel Auditorium, 471 Lagunita Drive, Stanford. Go to stanfordjazz.org.

Family: Summer Outdoor Movie Night
The community is invited to celebrate how parks make life better with a movie under the stars. Tomorrow’s movie will be Disney’s “Moana” (PG 1 hour 53 min.). All movies begin at 8:30 p.m. or when dark outside. Guests should bring a blanket or lawn chair to sit on, tomorrow, July 21, 8:30-10 p.m. at Eagle Park, 652 Franklin St., Mountain View. Go tomountainview.gov.

Family: Theatre in the Park
Peninsula Youth Theatre and the City of Mountain View present fairy tales and other children’s stories in a different 45-minute production each week performed by the children from Peninsula Youth Theatre’s “Theatre in the Park” summer camp program. Tomorrow’s show is “On the Tip of My Tongue,” a comic mystery adventure featuring characters from popular stories: Dorothy, Snow White and even Cruella Deville, tomorrow, July 21, 6:30-8 p.m. at ParkStage, 500 Castro St., Mountain View. Go to mountainview.gov.

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Rehab and nursing facilities in the bay area W

We seek all discharge planners and nurses in rehab, senior living facilities and nursing facilities in the bay area to partner with Motherhealth in providing on call personal caregivers for hourly or live-in.

new caregivers brochure motherhealth

Here are partial list of rehabs in the bay area:

Lincoln Glen Manor &
Nursing Facility
Address:  2671 Plummer Avenue
San Jose, CA 95125

Telephones:
Business: (408) 265-3222
Fax: (408) 265-2839
Email:  info@lgmanor.org

Sunnyview
Bernadette Viray
(408) 454-5600 | 22445 Cupertino Rd., Cupertino, CA 95014

Plum Tree Care Center
2580 Samaritan Drive
San Jose, CA 95124
Phone (408) 356-8181
Fax (408) 356-7261

Fatima Village
20400 Saratoga-Los Gatos Road
Saratoga, CA 95070
Phone: 408-741-2950
Fax: 408-741-4930
Email:information@fatimavilla.org

MANORCARE HEALTH SERVICES-SUNNYVALE
1150 Tilton Dr
Sunnyvale, CA 94087
Phone: 408-735-7200
Fax: 408-736-8629

Grant Cuesta Sub-Acute and Rehabilitation Center 
1949 Grant Road
Mountain View, CA 94040

Phone: (650) 968-2990
Fax: (650) 965-7955
For questions, please contact:
Heidi Stone
– 
(650) 814-8657 or  hstone@covenantcare.com

rehab 2

rehab 1

We will share in the net profit. Our caregivers are trained, monitored and treat patients like family.

care 1

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Resume available – looking for work

  • Freelance medical translator English-French, French-English for remote work
  • Technical writer for remote work
  • Web designer and mobile app developer for remote work
  • Web hosting
  • Marketing team for doctors – bay area
  • Health coach – online
  • Caregivers in the bay area for live in and hourly work
  • Case managers, nurses and physical therapists for bay area home care
  • Call center team in the Philippines for health/medical related projects

 

Email motherhealth@gmail.com if you need the above personnel/team.

Trump BUSTED Lining His Pocket With Defense Budget Kickbacks

Lunatic Fringe Gene Plays Key Role in the Renewable Brain

Lunatic Fringe Gene Plays Key Role in the Renewable Brain

Summary: A new study in eLife reports lunatic fringe genes mediates a mechanism that preserves neural stem cells, so they can form new neurons throughout life. The findings, researchers say, have far-reaching implications for the study of neurogenesis.

Source: Baylor.

The discovery that the brain can generate new cells – about 700 new neurons each day – has triggered investigations to uncover how this process is regulated. Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children’s Hospital have developed a novel mouse model that for the first time selectively identifies neural stem cells, the progenitors of new adult brain cells. In these mice, researchers have found a novel mechanism by which descendants of neural stem cells can send feedback signals to alter the division and the fate of the mother cell. These findings appear in eLife.

“Our initial goal for this study was to find a gene that is selectively expressed in primary neural stem cells. Based on the information obtained from publicly available expression databases, we started with roughly 750 potential candidate genes. It took an enormous amount of hard work and meticulousness to systematically narrow it down to a single gene – it was like looking for a needle in a haystack,” said Dr. Mirjana Mirjana Maletić-Savatić, assistant professor of pediatrics and neurology at Baylor and Texas Children’s Hospital, who led this study. “After extensive analysis, we were convinced that the gene lunatic fringe, a member of the well-studied Notch signaling pathway, was the selective marker of neural stem cells.”

Previous studies in a number of animal models have shown that members of the Notch signaling pathway participate in the regulation of stem cell fate.The finding that lunatic fringe is a selective marker for neural stem cells and a member of the Notch family was a clue of its possible role as regulator of neural stem cell fate. This represented a potentially significant step forward in the field of neurogenesis because the precise mechanism and the fine-tuning of Notch signaling in the hippocampus of the adult brain, where new neurons are born, had remained elusive until now.

Lunatic fringe helps keep the brain renewable

Mirjana Maletić-Savatić and her colleagues show that lunatic fringe mediates a mechanism that helps preserve neural stem cells, so that they can form new neurons throughout life while also ensuring optimal number of neurons.

Interestingly, neural stem cells and their progeny physically cluster closely around one another, which makes it an ideal environment for direct cell-cell communication between neural stem cells and adjacent cells. The scientists found that lunatic fringe allows neural stem cells to distinguish between and respond differently to surrounding cells expressing other markers, namely those expressing the Delta marker and those expressing the Jagged1 marker.

When surrounded by Delta-neurons, most neural stem cells remain in a stand-by mode, protected from random activation and unnecessary division. On the other hand, when neural stem cells interact with Jagged1-neurons, they begin to divide. Combined, these processes allow division of every neural stem cell to be finely regulated to prevent excessive division and premature exhaustion of its potential.

Image shows a DNA strand.

“This study and the mouse model we have generated is a huge step forward in the field of neural stem cell biology because now we not only have a benchmark to specifically label primary neural stem cells, but have identified a key quality control step that determines their fate,” said Fatih Semerci, postdoctoral student in Mirjana Maletić-Savatić lab and the lead author of this study. “Lunatic fringe allows neural stem cells to decide whether to stay dormant or not, and, once they start to divide, whether to continue or to stop.”

This study has far-reaching implications on the field of neurogenesis because age-related mental decline and psychiatric disorders such as anxiety and depression have been associated with a reduced ability to generate new neurons in the hippocampus, the center of learning and memory. The formation of new neurons is affected by many factors, both internal and external. For example, physical activity and enriched environment enhance it, while loneliness and depression dampen it. Adult hippocampal neurogenesis has garnered significant interest because targeting it could result in new therapies for many disorders.

ABOUT THIS NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH ARTICLE

Others who contributed to this study include William Tin-Shing Choi, Aleksander Bajic, Aarohi Thakkar, Juan Manuel Encinas, Andrew Groves of Baylor College of Medicine; Frederic Depreux of the Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science in Chicago and Neil Segil of University of Southern California.

Funding: Funding for this study comes from the Nancy Chang Award and the CPRIT grant (RP130573CPRIT), and in part by the Microscopy, RNA In Situ Hybridization and Neuropathology Core facility at Baylor College of Medicine, supported by the NIH Shared Instrumentation grant (1S10OD016167) and the NIH IDDRC grant U54HD083092. Further support was provided by the Cytometry and Cell Sorting Core (NCRR grant S10RR024574, NIAID AI036211 and NCI P30CA125123).

Source: Graciela Gutierrez – Baylor
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is in the public domain.
Original Research: Abstract for “Lunatic fringe-mediated Notch signaling regulates adult hippocampal neural stem cell maintenance” by Fatih Semerci, William Tin-Shing Choi, Aleksandar Bajic, Aarohi Thakkar, Juan Manuel Encinas, Frederic Depreux, Neil Segil, Andrew K Groves, and Mirjana Maletic-Savatic in eLife. Published online July 12 2017 doi:10.7554/eLife.24660

CITE THIS NEUROSCIENCENEWS.COM ARTICLE
Baylor “Lunatic Fringe Gene Plays Key Role in the Renewable Brain.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 19 July 2017.
<http://neurosciencenews.com/renwable-brain-lunatic-fringe-gene-7127/&gt;.

Abstract

Lunatic fringe-mediated Notch signaling regulates adult hippocampal neural stem cell maintenance

Hippocampal neural stem cells (NSCs) integrate inputs from multiple sources to balance quiescence and activation. Notch signaling plays a key role during this process. Here, we report that Lunatic fringe (Lfng), a key modifier of the Notch receptor, is selectively expressed in NSCs, and that Lfng in NSCs along with Notch ligands Delta1 and Jagged1 expressed by their progeny influence NSC recruitment, cell cycle duration and terminal fate. We propose a new model in which Lfng-mediated Notch signaling enables direct communication between a NSC and its descendants, so that progeny can send feedback signals to the “mother” cell to modify its cell cycle status. Lfng-mediated Notch signaling appears to be a key factor governing NSC quiescence, division, and fate.

“Lunatic fringe-mediated Notch signaling regulates adult hippocampal neural stem cell maintenance” by Fatih Semerci, William Tin-Shing Choi, Aleksandar Bajic, Aarohi Thakkar, Juan Manuel Encinas, Frederic Depreux, Neil Segil, Andrew K Groves, and Mirjana Maletic-Savatic in eLife. Published online July 12 2017 doi:10.7554/eLife.24660