TO YOUR HEALTH: When assisted living feels like home

Link to original story: https://www.thechiefnews.com/community/to-your-health-when-assisted-living-feels-like-home/article_9e233d9e-b4fe-11e9-b49d-0f9829e58cba.html

The residents of The Amber Assisted Living feel more like family members than they do like housemates. The “family feeling” is exactly what Heather Medina, Executive Director, strives to create.

The Amber Assisted Living, located at 365 SW Bel Air Drive in Clatskanie, provides assisted living to its senior residents, according to information on its website. It has existed since at least 2003, according to Medina. Since then, the facility has experienced a lot of changes, and for the better, Medina said.

When she started working at The Amber in 2015, Medina was employed as a medical technician, more commonly shortened to “med tech.” She worked there until 2017, and during that time, Medina said things were not going very well. One metric that Medina said exemplifies the failings of the facility during that time were online reviews on crowd-sourced review sites such as Yelp.com or Glassdoor.com.

“If you would post online looking for a job, people would say ‘don’t go there,’” Medina said. “Now, I can post and people will say ‘it’s a great place to work, it’s a great place to live.’ That’s how I like to compare the reputation.”

In 2015, the turnover of staff and administration at the place was high. Back then, Medina said there was a general lack of family involvement, and staff was under-trained.

Nowadays, it’s a very different story. Medina said it’s common for residents’ grandchildren to spend the night, and to have families over for the holidays.

Medina believes a lot of these changes come from improved staff training. The Amber employs a staff of 21: 16 caregivers and med techs, three kitchen staff, one maintenance manager and one nurse. There are also two volunteers that are in charge of the Sunday and Monday church services. While all of them contribute to the general upkeep and maintenance of the facility, the care of the residents falls primarily into the hands of the med techs and caregivers. As a former med tech herself, Medina said she understood the importance of ensuring that med techs were as familiar as possible with residents and their needs.

“We try to make sure they know every resident, who’s in which room and what they need.

We have them read care plans and know what they’re doing before they’re on their own. We make sure that the confidence is there and that they know what they’re doing. Nobody’s ever thrown to the wolves,” Medina said.

Medina said she believes improved training has made a big difference in the quality of care that the elderly in the facility receive.

As for the daily activities, there are a lot of things for residents to do. According to Medina, residents can participate in up to three activities per day. Most recently, the residents did canvas painting, a dice game, and decorated their “positivity board,” which provides positive messages for residents to read.

Amenities provided for residents include a pool table where pool tournaments are often held, a library, a movie room, an activities room filled with board games, and even a salon. Residents can participate in leading activities. On Saturdays, Julia Lambert leads bingo, and she also runs a community store for the other residents.

Recently, The Amber had its first barbecue, something Medina wants to repeat on an annual basis. The barbecue is just one example of Medina trying to include residents’ families as much as possible.

Several residents said they feel like a family, not like folks who happen to live in the same facility.

“We all consider ourselves a family, and I think that every new person that comes in is like family. Even the staff, they treat us like we’re one of their own kin,” Lambert said.

Lambert, 61, said she has only one blood-related family member left, her sister, who has health issues that make it hard for her to visit. She and her sister talk on the phone a lot, but Lambert does not feel lonely due to lack of visitors. She recommends the place to anyone considering assisted living.

“If you’re older and you still feel like you have things to do, I think you should come here and join us, and be part of our family, and not just be sitting in a bed,” Lambert said. “We’re not really a community, we’re a family.”

New senior living center in Columbia County aims to be a community inside of a community

By Lex Juarez | July 25, 2019 at 10:29 PM EDT – Updated July 26 at 3:29 PM
Link to the original article: https://www.wfxg.com/2019/07/26/new-senior-living-center-columbia-county-aims-be-community-inside-community/

AUGUSTA, GA (WFXG) – A new senior living center opened its doors in Columbia County on Thursday, July 25, for a ceremonial ribbon cutting. Thrive at Augusta Senior Living has been in town constructing and planning for over a year, and residents will start moving in in August.

Herbert Olsen is one of 20 who have already picked out a room in the building. He said, “It really is different. I was retired, living in a big house, and I didn’t think I needed that. This will be more comfortable.” Olsen’s daughter is excited he is moving too, as she lives just around the corner. However, operators say the establishment will offer more than comfort, striving to create a community. Melita Winnick, President of Thrive at Augusta explained, “A community is a place where people come and they thrive. They socialize and have different options for them, and there’s a lot of choice. A facility is a place they have to go to. There’s limited choices, there’s no luxury and it feels very clinical.” Tammy Shepherd, President and CEO of the Columbia County Chamber of Commerce added, “It’s focused on having a great quality of life for our seniors, and what a great amenity to have here.”

Thrive at Augusta works to offer residents a more at home feel. The building houses a gym, movie theatre, a salon and spa, outdoor parks and game areas as well as multiple dining rooms. It joins six other senior living centers in the area, and Shepherd says helps fill the need in our community. She said, “As baby boomers are coming out of the workforce and growing older, to be able to have a facility, or a community as they like to say, to carry out that next stage of life is so important.”

The building sits on only 13 of the 40 acres the company has. They are already planning on expansion, starting with redoing an old farm house next door and turning it into a Bed and Breakfast.

Report: Financial fraud is targeting older adults at record levels

The financial exploitation of older people is a rampant epidemic in America. A recent report by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau revealed that each incident of financial fraud cost older adults ages 70 to 79 an average of $45,300. And when the older adult knew the suspect, the average loss rose to about $50,000.

As older adults experience more wealth events – from selling a home to making IRA withdrawals – they become more vulnerable to scammers. This can often happen when older people lose touch with those who can help protect them. While technology has made lots of things easier, including managing money, it has also increased the ways for scammers to weaponize fraudulent activity. It is more critical than ever to empower older adults to protect their financial accounts – and for trusted family and friends to help them do so, before it’s too late.

World Elder Abuse Awareness Day is observed in June. This is a great reminder and call to action to act on this topic. Through increased awareness and concrete steps, we can help our loved ones better protect their financial assets.

How to spot financial fraud

Former FBI section chief of the Cyber Threat Division Greg Ruppert, now the head of financial crimes risk management at Charles Schwab, said, “I’ve seen every trick scammers use to separate older adults from their money and they are ever more targeted and sophisticated in their approach. Financial scams, no matter the amount lost, are devastating to older adults, who rely on those resources and are unable to recoup the loss.”

Common types of scams targeting older adults include healthcare insurance scams, counterfeit prescription drug schemes, romance scams, person-in-need scams, lottery scams, funeral and cemetery scams, telemarketing/phone scams and investment schemes.

How family members can help

Help protect your older family member against financial scams by staying engaged so you can spot the signs of an investment scam and help if warning signs appear. Speak to them regularly and be on alert for clues, for example if they mention being asked for money, or that managing their finances is confusing or overwhelming.

When you visit them in their home, notice visual cues such as unpaid bills or piles of unopened mail and physical clues like fearful behavior, worsening of an illness or disability as the result of the pressure from a scammer’s tactics.

One of the biggest risk factors for older adults when fraud has taken place is being too embarrassed to admit they may have been scammed to ask for help. This hesitancy can only be overcome with regular communication and wellness check-ins with trusted family members.

5 steps to safeguard financial assets

Here’s how you can avoid scams and make sure you and your senior family members are not victims of financial fraud:

* Designate a trusted contact. Financial institutions like Charles Schwab provide an option to designate a trusted contact – a person who can speak to your financial services provider in the event of an emergency, such as financial exploitation.

* Get your financial affairs in order. Understand your full financial situation, including locating and filing key financial records, creating or reviewing wills, establishing trusts and power of attorney declarations, and updating account and insurance policy beneficiaries as your life situation changes.

* Guard your passwords. According to the 2018 FBI Internet Crime Report, people over 60 experience the most incidents of online investment scams and the highest monetary loss. To protect your online financial accounts, create unique passwords and never share usernames, logins, passwords or personal identification numbers.

* Get smart with your smartphone. Scammers can mask their phone number to make it appear that a call is local or from a trusted party. Prevent telemarketing scams by joining the National Do Not Call registry and let calls from unknown phone numbers go to voicemail.

* Up your technology game. Local recreation centers and libraries offer technology and digital literacy classes to help older adults and their family members protect themselves online and learn about the latest financial schemes.

To learn more about how to educate yourself and your older family members on the latest financial schemes, visit: https://www.schwab.com/resource-center/insights/section/resources-for-senior-investors.

How to pay for senior living

Shopping. Cooking. Cleaning. The burdens of living alone were taking a toll on Joyce, who at 89 was the oldest resident in her apartment building. Though she’d spent a lifetime saving money, Joyce wasn’t sure what she could afford. Her daughter Sandy knew it was time to talk about senior living.

“It took some convincing to help her understand this was what she had saved for,” said Sandy. “With the sale of her house and retirement savings, she could live comfortably in independent senior living. Plus, she would be around people her age, have plenty of activities and three nice meals a day.”

Joyce’s senior living journey isn’t unique. Most people are either not prepared for the potential costs of senior living, or think they’re not prepared. A survey of 2,000 Americans 18 to over 51 for Brookdale Senior Living revealed 65% aren’t saving money to pay for senior living, and 21% said they won’t be able to pay for it or don’t know how they’ll pay for it. Only half said they have a plan in place.

Mary Sue Patchett, Brookdale’s executive vice president of community and field operations, recommends avoiding sticker shock by assessing current expenses. You may find that freeing yourself of expenses tied to living in a house – mortgage, food, transportation, utilities, home maintenance and more – and incorporating these into one payment for a senior living community is more cost-effective than expected.

Patchett recommends seeking a flexible pricing structure at a senior living community, as one size does not fit all. Making a choice that fits your situation means you won’t be paying for unnecessary services.

Sandy found two locations that fit her mom’s needs and compared costs of living alone to the cost of senior living. They landed on a Brookdale community near Sandy’s home.

“Adult children must understand their parent’s misgivings and help them decide what’s best,” said Sandy. “Considering my mom’s age, senior living was a smart move. The cost is comparable to living alone and provides peace of mind for everyone. We know she is eating, socializing and safe.”

How do people pay for senior living, and how can you keep costs affordable?

Current assets and income are what most people use to pay for senior living, just as they would pay for expenses staying in their current home: savings, pension or retirement plan funds, social security and annuities. Like Joyce, one big source of funds comes from the sale of their current home.

Long-term care insurance is a possible source for those with chronic disability or illness, if they have a policy. Rules regarding benefits and eligibility vary per state and policy.

Veterans’ benefits, through the Veterans Aid and Attendance Pension, can help veterans and spouses offset costs of long-term care and/or assisted living at some communities.

Selling or cashing out a life insurance policy may be one route for those who no longer need life insurance. There are many options, so you should shop around. Consult your tax, financial and legal advisors to determine the implications of this option.

Medicaid options may provide some assistance for assisted living, depending on where you live and if you qualify. Do not confuse Medicaid with Medicare, which does not cover assisted living costs.

Family support is another source to consider for help with the cost of assisted living. In many families, children or other family members contribute to the cost of senior living. It’s best to discuss possible support with family before the need arises.

By selecting a senior living community that provides just the amount of care you need, you can keep costs low. Many communities offer options from apartments with kitchens and guest rooms to just a bedroom and bath. Opting for a roommate can save a lot. Senior living communities offering independent and assisted living or other care services on one campus helps couples stay together, even when they need different levels of care, and make it easier to move from one area to another if needs change.

Now is a good time to assess your situation and talk with your spouse or family about your needs and desires down the road. Planning ahead lets you tour communities and decide what services and amenities you want and need.

Forty-eight hours after Joyce moved to Brookdale, she was thrilled with her decision. Sandy immediately noticed a change in her mom. She met a group of ladies she refers to as “the girls” and quickly found her purpose as the community librarian. She’s happier than she was in her apartment, and according to Sandy, that makes it worth every penny.

For information about Brookdale Senior Living, visit brookdale.com/en/where-to-begin/financial-considerations.html.

Watercrest Senior Living Awarded Management of Inspired Living of Palm Bay: Launches Rebranding as Palm Bay Memory Care

NEWS PROVIDED BY
Watercrest Senior Living Group
Jul 26, 2019, 12:53 ET

VERO BEACH, Fla., July 26, 2019 /PRNewswire/ — Watercrest Senior Living Group has been awarded management of the senior living community formerly known as Inspired Living of Palm Bay, Florida. As of July 1st, 2019, Watercrest Senior Living has stepped in to provide operational leadership of the community newly launched as Palm Bay Memory Care.

Earlier this month, Watercrest’s senior leadership team welcomed and engaged the associates, families and residents as they implemented Watercrest’s innovative care, training and service programs in conjunction with the launch of Palm Bay Memory Care.

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Watercrest Senior Living Group Awarded Management of Inspired Living of Palm Bay; Launches Rebranding as Palm Bay Memory Care.
Watercrest Senior Living Group Awarded Management of Inspired Living of Palm Bay; Launches Rebranding as Palm Bay Memory Care.
“We are thrilled to welcome the associates who have passionately served the residents of this community for many years,” says Marc Vorkapich, Principal and CEO of Watercrest Senior Living Group. “It is inspiring to bring teams together, cultivating new relationships and growth to serve the seniors of Palm Bay with the highest levels of care.”

Watercrest Senior Living Group was founded by Marc Vorkapich, CEO, and Joan Williams, CFO, to honor our mothers and fathers, aspiring to become a beacon for quality in senior living by surpassing standards of care, service and associate training. Watercrest senior living communities are recognized for their luxury aesthetic, exceptional amenities, world-class care, and innovative memory care programming offering unparalleled service to seniors living with Alzheimer’s and dementia.

Watercrest Senior Living Group is unique in their growth mindset, modeling servant leadership and exceptional standards of customer service within every level of the organization. Watercrest associates champion a culture which nurtures relationships in the interest of acting as trusted advisors. By continuously investing in these servant hearts, Watercrest develops value-centered leaders who deliver personalized service.

“My years spent in senior living have shown me that many come to this industry accidentally, but once you experience it, you never want to leave” says Michele Lyon, Executive Director of Palm Bay Memory Care. “These are my people: the stories they tell, the lives they have lived and the knowledge they share is priceless. I’m overjoyed to continue serving our seniors with excellence here at Palm Bay Memory Care.”

Palm Bay Memory Care is ideally located at 350 Malabar Road SW in Palm Bay, Fl. The all-memory care residence features 72 apartments with gracious accommodations and upscale amenities. Residents enjoy state-of-the-art wellness, enhanced culinary, and exceptional care programs, all tailored to individual resident preferences. To schedule a tour, contact Michele Lyon at 321-574-6290.

A certified Great Place to Work, Watercrest Senior Living Group specializes in the development and operations management of assisted living and memory care communities and the growth of servant leaders. With multiple senior living projects in development across the southeast, Watercrest is setting new standards of quality for seniors and their families in the development of upscale senior living communities. Visit www.watercrestseniorliving.com or www.palmbaymemorycare.com for more information.

SOURCE Watercrest Senior Living Group

Workers, Retirees Are Feeling Better About Retirement Finances

By Anne Tergesen
April 23, 2019 12:01 a.m. ET

With the U.S. economy strong and stocks near record levels, retirees’ and workers’ confidence in having enough money for retirement rose over the past year to new highs, according to a long-running survey released Tuesday.

According to the annual survey by the nonprofit Employee Benefit Research Institute, 82% of polled retirees are optimistic about their ability to live comfortably in retirement, up from 75% last year. The figure closely matches the levels recorded in 2005 and 2017 and is the highest since the survey started…

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Music Plays a Leading Role in New Health Products for Alzheimer’s and Dementia

Link to original article: https://www.billboard.com/articles/business/8506667/music-alzheimers-dementia-therapy-treatment-health-products

by Andy Hermann

“To be able to express a song, you’re literally capitalizing on the whole brain,” says Andy Tubman of Musical Health Technologies.

On a recent Thursday at OPICA, an adult daycare center in West Los Angeles, a music therapist named Andy Tubman leads a group of 10 seniors through a sing-along of “America the Beautiful.” As the music starts, he points to his ear. “Listen for the words,” he coaches.

The seniors — all experiencing “some degree of cognitive decline,” as Tubman puts it — start hesitantly at first. But with the therapist’s encouragement, most are soon belting out the familiar tune. “Oh my goodness, you’re singers!” Tubman effuses, as aging vocal cords strain to reach the high notes of “above the fruited plain.”

They’re also helped by a unique feature on the track they’re singing along to: a soothing male voice that speaks each lyric before it’s sung. This comes especially in handy on the song’s next verse, the seldom-heard, “O beautiful for patriot dream, that sees beyond the years.” But for people with advanced Alzheimer’s disease or dementia, remembering the first verse of “America the Beautiful” can be a challenge, too — hence the spoken-word prompts built into the therapeutic music program called SingFit, developed by Tubman’s company, Musical Health Technologies.

Founded in 2012 by Tubman and his sister, Rachel Francine, Musical Health Technologies is one of several companies developing products based on a growing body of scientific evidence that music can be a powerful tool in the treatment of Alzheimer’s and dementia. “To be able to express a song, you’re literally capitalizing on the whole brain,” says Tubman, a licensed music therapist and the main designer of his company’s suite of singing programs for eldercare facilities, which is called SingFit Prime. “Language centers, timing centers, motor centers, planning centers — you get this whole brain exercise.”

SingFit Prime, which Musical Health Technologies launched in 2014, focuses on using music as an interactive tool, but even passive music listening stimulates the brain in ways that can be beneficial to Alzheimer’s patients. A 2018 study at University of Utah Health used real-time MRI scans of patients’ brain activity to demonstrate that familiar music lit up areas of the brain, like the supplemental motor area, that remain active in patients with advanced Alzheimer’s, even as activity in speech and memory pathways declines as the disease progresses.

“This might be a sort of window where you can reach patients with Alzheimer’s disease, because it’s a part of the brain that still tends to be functioning until very late in their whole disorder,” says Dr. Jeff Anderson, one of the co-authors of the study.

Anderson notes that part of the inspiration for the study was the 2014 documentary Alive Inside, which showed patients with extremely advanced Alzheimer’s appearing to become animated and lucid in response to familiar music. As powerful as that film was, its depiction of Alzheimer’s patients interacting with music was anecdotal. Anderson’s colleagues, and the philanthropist who funded their study, thought that “maybe there’s some way to put a little more science behind it.”

In the Netherlands, another set of Alzheimer’s-related products began not as a scientific experiment, but as an art project. In 2015, Dutch artists and designers Roos Meerman and Tom Kortbeek created the Tactile Orchestra, a large wall installation covered in soft fur that responds to different kinds of touch with a range of sounds and musical tones. Soon after they debuted the project, they were contacted by several Dutch health organizations. “This multisensoric experience that your art piece provides will be very useful maybe for our healthcare process, for people with dementia,” Kortbeek recalls them saying.

Last year, Meerman and Kortbeek launched Kozie, a company that takes the tactile, multisensory experience of the Tactile Orchestra and applies it to therapeutic music products. Their first product, the KozieWe, is a modified version of the Tactile Orchestra, designed for group therapy sessions in which the goal is to get Alzheimer’s patients connecting and interacting with one another. They also introduced the KozieMe, a pillow with built-in speakers that can play familiar music or comforting messages for the patient, activated with a simple touch or a squeeze. Last month, both products made their U.S. debut at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival; Kortbeek and Meerman say the response was overwhelmingly positive and they’ve already begun plans for introducing Kozie products to the U.S. market.

“The whole goal is to make healthcare really personal,” says Meerman, who watched her own grandmother struggle with dementia. “Music is really a way to connect with a person that has dementia.”

At Tubman’s SingFit Prime session at OPICA, you can see those connections happening. Both during and between songs, Tubman gently encourages the seniors to participate not only by singing, but by clapping, tapping their feet, and finishing his sentences. After “American the Beautiful,” he introduces the next song with a few clues: It’s a city to the north, with a famous bridge. “‘I Left My Heart in’ …” he says, voice trailing off.

“San Francisco!” several participants call out.

All of the session’s songs are centered around the theme of geography: Other selections include “When the Saints Go Marching In,” “Tennessee Waltz” and “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling.” “The theme keeps people on task better,” Tubman explains. Other SingFit Prime curricula are centered around such themes as pets, holidays and the outdoors.

A SingFit app on Tubman’s iPad, played through external speakers, provides the soundtrack. Within the app, Tubman can control the volume of both the guide singer and the “lyric coach,” that speaking voice that telegraphs the line of each song. The guide singer is not Tony Bennett, but a convincing facsimile; a Frank Sinatra impersonator on “Fly Me to the Moon” and “New York, New York” sounds even more like the real deal. Tubman says his company is “snobby” about their singers and arrangements, which are all original and paced so as to provide space for the lyric coach’s prompts.

“We really try to filter through so that the music is authentic,” he explains. Kate Richards Geller, another music therapist who works with Tubman on SingFit, says they choose repertoire based on what she calls seniors’ “sticky years” — that formative period roughly between ages 13 and 23, “the years they were listening to [that] music and all those songs went in and stayed. That’s what we’re providing them is this opportunity to reenter that world.”

In addition to the app, SingFit Prime provides eldercare centers with training for facilitators, props (at OPICA, brightly colored handkerchiefs prove especially popular) and detailed workbooks for each music session, which the facilitator can follow step-by-step to introduce each song, add trivia and commentary to encourage discussion and participation, and adjust the difficulty level depending on the group’s response. The goal, Tubman explains, is to provide a “turnkey” product so that “people who are not music therapists can utilize singing in a really powerful, robust way.” He says over 430 senior communities around the U.S. currently use SingFit Prime, including assisted living, memory care facilities, and adult daycare centers like OPICA.

By the time the group at OPICA finishes their 45-minute singing session, nearly all are fully engaged to a degree that’s rare among patients with advanced Alzheimer’s or dementia. During the final song, “New York, New York,” one man begins to weep; most join Tubman in forming a seated but enthusiastic kick line. As the group disperses, another man laments that the session is ending before they got to his favorite city, then bursts into an impromptu rendition of another geographic Sinatra classic, “Chicago.”

Much clinical work is still to be done before scientists and music therapists fully understand music’s effect on Alzheimer’s patients, or how best to effectively employ music as a therapeutic tool within the Alzheimer’s community. “It’s not any kind of cure,” Anderson cautions. “There’s nothing that changes the course of the disease.” But studies like the one Anderson co-authored, and the early successes of products like Kozie and SingFit, suggest that music’s potential to improve the quality of life for those with Alzheimer’s — and, possibly, its power to at least mitigate the long-term effects of the disease — has yet to be fully realized.

“Singing takes place in the whole brain. There are many redundant pathways,” says SingFit’s Francine. “You start to sing and then brain plasticity takes over… It’s really mind-boggling what they’re finding out about the brain and its ability to heal itself.”

Retirement communities adding on-site clinics to improve seniors’ health


By Kevin Stankiewicz
The Columbus Dispatch
Link to article: https://www.dispatch.com/news/20190407/retirement-communities-adding-on-site-clinics-to-improve-seniors-health

Tom Elliott won’t need to drive to Gahanna to see his doctor anymore. Instead, he’ll walk about 220 yards from the main lobby at Friendship Village of Dublin.

The reason? Well, because now he can.

As of last week, the 90-year-old and all the other residents at the senior-living community have a full-fledged doctor’s office operating five days a week there.

“It’s a great improvement,” said 88-year-old Jack Pettit, who used to drive almost 20 minutes to see his physician in Dublin. “It’ll be just like going to the doctor, but just down the hall.”

Transportation barriers can keep seniors from getting the health care they need, and not being able to access primary care, in particular, can lead to increased reliance on high-cost hospital emergency departments.

More clinics are being opened in senior-living communities nationwide through partnerships like the one between Friendship Village and Central Ohio Primary Care (COPC), experts say.

“The idea of having primary care embedded where people live makes a whole lot of sense for older adults,” said Dr. Julie Bynum, a professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan.

She said it can result in fewer hospitalizations as well as fewer emergency department and specialty physician visits. It also can lower the overall number of doctors that seniors see.

“If you think about the way we used to do medical care when we were in small towns, there used to be a community doctor who was pretty much embedded in the community,” Bynum said.

It also allows doctors to automatically understand where and how their patients live, she said.

For example, if a senior-living community resident gets sick in the evening and calls for an outside physician, that doctor might not know what kind of care is available at the residence, such as whether a nurse is onsite 24/7, Bynum said.

But if the doctor has an office at the facility and knows there’s a nurse available, “you don’t have to send them to the emergency room,” she said.

An enhanced patient-doctor relationship also can lead to better care around memory-loss issues, such as early signs of dementia, or possibly an underlying condition such as a urinary-tract infection, said Dr. Brent Forester, an associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School who sees patients at assisted-living communities.

COPC, a health-care provider with about 75 practices in central Ohio, will have four doctors who work out of the Friendship Village of Dublin office.

Each will do one-week rotations seeing patients for regular appointments and acute problems. The doctors also will spend part of the day providing care at Friendship Village’s nursing home, said Executive Director Rita Doherty.

Residents don’t have to use COPC physicians as their primary-care doctor, but switching was a “no brainer” for Elliott.

Before the partnership with COPC, there was a physician at Friendship Village, but with less regularity because the doctor also provided care at other facilities.

The way primary care is delivered at senior-living communities varies greatly, but facilities are recognizing that closer relationships with doctors lead to better care, Forester said.

Bexley Primary Care, which is part of the OhioHealth network, for example, rents space from Wexner Heritage Village. But in addition to serving Wexner residents, it’s also open to members of the broader community, which make up a majority of its patients, said Dr. Jaynine Vado, a doctor at that location who is part of the OhioHealth Physician Group.

Doherty said it’s possible COPC’s primary-care practice at Friendship Village will be opened to community members down the road. But for now, the focus is on making sure residents’ needs are met first.

“I think it’s a game changer,” she said. “And I think we’re going to see this pop up all over the place.”

kstankiewicz@dispatch.com

@kevin_stank

Woodmont Focuses on Senior Housing, Taps Nichols to Launch New Division

The residential and commercial developer tapped Nichols to help it expand development of independent living, assisted living, memory care, and active adult communities.
By Steve Lubetkin | March 08, 2019 at 04:00 AM

Link to the original article: https://www.globest.com/2019/03/08/woodmont-focuses-on-senior-housing-taps-nichols-to-launch-new-division/?slreturn=20190210190846

FAIRFIELD, NJ—Woodmont Properties, focusing on rising opportunity in the senior housing sector, has formed a new senior housing division and is naming veteran senior housing executive Stephen Nichols to lead the division.
Nichols, whose experience includes executive positions with Brightview and Atria Senior Living, will oversee strategy for the development and operations of Woodmont’s senior communities, and will focus on walkable and transit-oriented markets that are well suited for the development of independent living, assisted living, memory care and active adult properties.

“As we continue to evolve and grow our portfolio, we believe there is great opportunity to meet the immense demand for high-quality senior housing options across New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania,” says Eric Witmondt, chief executive officer of Woodmont Properties. “We’re excited to take the experience we’ve gained through the creation of luxury apartment communities in some of the region’s best transit towns and downtown neighborhoods and applying it to the development of world-class senior housing communities.”
“Woodmont has the experience and resources to build several types of senior housing products, and I’m thrilled to be given the opportunity to lead this exciting effort,” says Nichols. “We are already targeting multiple towns that could benefit from senior housing development, and I’ll be focused on executing on Woodmont’s vision for the senior housing sector with the same level of quality that has become the Woodmont standard.”

Before joining Woodmont, Nichols was an executive director with Brightview Senior Living, where he focused on the construction, lease up and operations of new senior housing communities across the New Jersey and New York markets. He was also a regional vice president with Atria Senior Living, where he was responsible for the development of 18 communities from The Bronx, New York to Waterbury, Connecticut.

Senior Living: Families facing early Alzheimer’s disease are not alone

Link to the original article: https://www.dailybreeze.com/2019/03/09/senior-living-families-facing-early-alzheimers-disease-are-not-alone/

By By David W. Hart, Ph.D. | |
PUBLISHED: March 9, 2019 at 6:27 am | UPDATED: March 9, 2019 at 6:27 am

One of the questions that I receive most frequently goes something like this: why are there so many more people being diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and other dementias today compared to two or three generations ago? The simple answer is that more of us are living longer today than ever before and age is the number one risk factor for developing dementia. In fact, about 40 percent of individuals over the age of 80 have some form of cognitive impairment and if you haven’t heard, those living past 85 is one of the fastest growing populations in the United States.

There’s also a secondary reason for an increase in diagnosis of dementia. The assessment tools available to diagnose a broad spectrum of cognitive impairment are more accurate now than they were 20 or 30 years ago. Because AD is the most feared disease among adults over the age of 55, individuals who experience memory challenges may be more likely to check in with a health care professional to determine the cause and hopefully rule out a progressive neurodegenerative disorder like AD.

This, along with an increase in public awareness of strategies to promote prevention of neurodegenerative disorders, the number of individuals diagnosed in the early stages of AD and other dementias has increased significantly.

Receiving a diagnosis of AD or another dementia can be debilitating for both patient and family. Fear of the unknown and what will happen next is a common source of stress. Additionally, families are often uninformed about the causes and types of dementia, how they progress and what to expect at each stage, how to plan for long term care, and where to find support in the community. Taken together, this lack of information and support may exact an excessive emotional toll on all involved. Gratefully, I may have some solutions for you.

Southern Californians living with early memory loss have access to community-based programs designed to instill hope, build community, and provide access to expert information toward living one’s best life.

Memory Club
This program, sponsored by Alzheimer’s Los Angeles, Beach Cities Health District, and Always Best Care South Bay, is made up of a select group of peers who are experiencing early memory loss and their families. The group meets for six to eight consecutive weeks and offers participants the skills and support needed to tackle the daily challenges related to cognitive impairment and memory loss. Each week includes an interactive educational presentation on a relevant topic including:

  • What to expect as the disease progresses
  • Treatment options and clinical trials
  • Diet and exercise programming
  • Cultivating happiness and purpose
  • Introduction to community resources
  • Strategies for strengthening working and short term memory
  • How to effectively manage stress and adapt to adversity
  • The presentations are immediately followed by two parallel support groups: one for folks with memory challenges and other for family care partners. The support group format provides each collaborative the opportunity to share their stories, problem solve, and gain emotional support in a safe environment with others who are facing similar challenges. Nearly 98% of past participants agree or strongly agree that what was learned in Memory Club improved their lives.

    Applications to participate in the upcoming six-week session tentatively scheduled for March 28 through May 4 are now being accepted. The program is free. For more information, email dhart@abc-seniors.com or call (310) 792-8666 and ask for Dr. Hart.

    Early Memory Loss Forum
    Hosted by Alzheimer’s Los Angeles, the conference is a day-long program providing support, education and resources for caregivers, families, and individuals facing early memory loss. The event is 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 6 at the Torrance Memorial Hoffman Health Conference Center, 3315 Medical Center Drive. Admission is $20 and limited scholarships are available. Register at alzheimersla.org.

    The take away message: you are not alone. Our community has programs and services that can help you navigate the challenges of early memory loss. In reaching out for support, you likely have nothing to lose and almost everything to gain: information, support and community.

    Lastly, I am facilitating an individual workshop: Adapting to Adversity: Building Resilience as a Foundation for Aging Well from 5:30 – 7 p.m., March 19 at the Redondo Beach Main Library, 303 N. Pacific Coast Highway. We will discuss the science and healing properties of resilience, how to cultivate it, and how to enact it too. This program is offered at no cost to attendees.

    What questions to you have about Alzheimer’s disease and dementia? Send them to dhart@abc-seniors.com and I’ll use this space to answer some of them.

    Until next time, be well.

    David Hart, Ph.D., is the director of clinical services at Always Best Care Senior Services in Torrance and is a faculty member in the Department of Counseling at California State University, Fullerton. Hart, founding chair and member of the South Bay Dementia Education Consortium, specializes in working with older adults with dementia and their families. For more information, go to alwaysbestcaresouthbay.com or contact him at dhart@abc-seniors.com or at (310) 792-8666.