LeadingAge New York Adviser Winter Vol. 1 | Page 20

(continued from page 18) Care Program at a weight of approximately 325 pounds. She had extensive abdominal hernias and due to her weight and discomfort was unable to drive her car, was homebound, socially isolated and unable to walk; a fall in her home led to hospitalization. On admission to our program Mary met with the care team and learned about the weight loss assistance services available to her. After evaluating her options Mary elected not to have gastric bypass or a lap band procedure, she chose to lose the weight on her own. Mary engaged the Registered Dietician for nutritional counseling, rehabilitative services for an exercise plan and psychological services for counseling. Mary embraced portion control and educated herself to make better food choices, she attended Physical Therapy to regain her mobility and actively participated in an exercise program, she also participated in on-going meetings with a counselor, and twelve months later, with support from her family and care team, Mary had lost 125 pounds. Because of the weight loss Mary was finally a surgical candidate for repair of the hernias that had plagued her for years. The surgeon was so impressed with Mary’s weight loss success he agreed to perform a panniculectomy to remove excess skin at her abdominal fold at no cost to Mary while performing the hernia repairs. After Mary’s post surgical recovery she returned home, has begun driving a car again and has resumed life interests and pursuits. She continues to visit the program on occasion to stay in touch with staff and share her ongoing success. She has not regained the weight. 19 Is there anything you would like to add related to serving people needing long term care who are not an aging population? Two thoughts: Significance of Language and Physical Plant Design Language. The language we use when characterizing our organization to business partners, our Board and the community is important when trying to change perceptions and acceptance among all ages of potential consumers. We do not refer to ourselves as a nursing home; we are a nursing center. I have never presented to a group where a single hand was raised when asked if anyone looked forward to one day living in a nursing home. The term nursing home generally evokes negative imagery attributed to a perception that it is a place where the aged go to die. There is greater acceptance of the concept of a nursing center. We represent ourselves as a residence in which needed long term care services can be received whether the individual is 19 or 99 without unreasonable loss of lifestyle. We believe in relationship building and have permanent staff assignments to honor resident preference profiles that reflect normalcy of waking, sleeping, bathing and eating and social engagement routines. Preserving the ideal of individuality makes it possible for younger residents to preserve identity and accept the environment. We have tremendous flexibility in our physical plant layout to convert any 12-bed Family Unit for homogeneous services to discreet programs including those that may serve younger, nontraditional patient types. We are well positioned to meet the needs of any future patient type, regardless of age. Adviser a publication of LeadingAge New York | Winter 2015