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![]() Making the Decision – Choosing a Senior’s Facilityby Betty-Anne Christie
Herb's StoryHerb has been living in the Retirement Residence for just about four years now. Here's what he had to say. "I have to give my daughter credit. I've been a widower for 10 years, kind of set in my ways I guess. I knew I had to move, but my daughter didn't rush me. She understood it was my life, and where I was moving had to be my decision. Alice and Fred's Story as told by their daughterI also spoke with Alice and her daughter Bernice. Alice and her husband live in a "campus" which is a Retirement Residence that is attached to an Assisted Living facility. Alice lives in an apartment in the Retirement Residence and her husband, Fred who has dementia, lives in the Assisted Living facility. Here's what Bernice told me. "Mom was really completely worn out and becoming depressed from looking after Dad at home. Mom didn't want to be separated from Dad, but she knew that they could not go on with Dad's memory getting worse and worse. We spoke to Dad's doctor and he referred us to Home Care. The Home Care nurses got things underway. Jessie's StoryFinally I spoke with Jessie who has lived in Assisted Living for several years. Jessie has Parkinson's disease and needs help with managing daily personal routines. Here's what advice Jessie had to offer me. "I can certainly give you some advice because I learned the hard way. I fought moving out of my home to the end, then I landed in hospital and was told I couldn't go home. My family came out from the east and picked a retirement residence in pretty quick order. It was okay for a while - nice enough, but pretty soon I needed more help and every time I needed help with something else they added another charge to my monthly bill. Extra charges began to mount up. First was to do my laundry, next was to help me open my pill bottles, next was to help me get into my shower - on and on it went. So that's the advice of the real experts. Here are a few pieces of advice I would like to add:
Finally, the best advice I have to offer is to watch and listen to the staff and residents carefully as you tour a residence with your Mom or Dad. The building you are touring may have a gorgeous dining room, a beautiful view, and a fantastic theatre room, but it's really not those things that will be the key to how content your parents will be. Instead it is the people, the staff and residents, that make seniors' housing a home instead of a facility. |
NEWSLETTER
Betty-Anne brings over 25 years of experience developing and managing services for seniors. She and her partner, Doug Murphy, currently provide consulting, planning and development support for a variety of clients engaged in seniors housing and health projects in Alberta and BC. During Betty-Anne's career she has held executive positions including Vice-President of Resident Services, Western Canada, with Chartwell Seniors Housing and Director of Supportive and Assisted Living for the Fraser Health Authority in BC. Her responsibility in this position was to plan and initiate the implementation 1100 units of affordable Assisted Living in the lower mainland region. This initiative was a provincial tri-partite partnership model which involved health authorities, BC Housing and non-profit and for profit operators. Betty-Anne was also the Senior Vice-President of Operations for the Good Samaritan Society which is a multi-facility, multi-program organization in Edmonton. Betty-Anne has worked extensively as a consultant to health authorities and health care organizations in developing programs for seniors in Alberta, BC and Ontario. In 1999 she was the recipient of the Silver Premiers' Award of Excellence for innovations in Health Care for her work in developing the first Canadian replication of the PACE program, the CHOICE program, in Edmonton. Betty-Anne Christie |
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Wednesday, August 20, 2008.
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