Archive for the 'Aging' Category

Kids Care Makes Room For Elder Care

Monday, October 15th, 2007

Author

Thomas Wiest

CEO, Aspirience Home Care

A long-time provider of child daycare services will close Friday, Dec. 7.

Kids Care Center, 640 N. Main St., River Falls, WI, will go out of business on that date. Families using Kids Care are now being assisted in their efforts to find other daycare providers.

According to information released Friday from The Lutheran Home Association in Belle Plaine, MN, the Kids Care Center building, while meeting current safety codes, is cramped for space and needs costly upgrades and repairs, especially in heating.

After reading and researching this story more it sounds a lot like the Minnesota Veterans Home scenario we have going on in our own state, minus the daycare piece. Hundreds of thousands of dollars will need to be spent just to get the facility to maintain certain standards.

A spokesperson for The Lutheran Home Association says that based on market trends, the local nursing home facility will eventually need the space now used by Kids Care.

In other words, The Lutheran Home in River Falls will expand its services for the elderly into the area now set aside for the children’s daycare. It is another truth to the fact of the trend going on right now. There are more and more people coming into retirement and needing some type of care.

It’s unfortunate children will be displaced to other child care centers but, maybe a grand parent of theirs will be able to reside in the new facility when it is completed in late 2008.

A statement from The Lutheran Home Association reads: “Ultimately, this campus will be solely for retirement living and will offer a continuum of services and care for seniors. Currently the campus provides skilled nursing care, rehabilitative therapies and senior apartments.”

Kids Care is operated by The Lutheran Home, a Wisconsin nursing facility for the elderly.

I would not be surprised if this happens again as we continue to see a shrinking child care market and a blossoming elder care market in the near future.

It’s important to know, Aspirience Home Care can help you with your home care options by keeping your loved ones where they are most comfortable and safe.

What to do with $57 million?

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Author

Thomas Wiest

CEO, Aspirience Home Care

I’m sure I am not the only one with this question.

As I have read the stories about awarding the 35W bridge contract to a company called Flatiron Constructors, out of Colorado, I get the feeling that there is, indeed, something going on that I don’t understand.

The Flatiron people came in $57 million more expensive than other, local bidders and tied for the longest construction time, 437 days, with another company called Walsh Construction and American Bridge.

What to do with $57 million? I have some ideas.

We could care for almost 900 Minnesotans for a year in a single room, private nursing home. This would be a 24/7 care facility with full room and board and on site nurses. Pretty comprehensive care.

We could care for about 1,000 Minnesotans for a year in a two-person shared nursing home. Same as above but shared by two residents often creating better companion care for both

We could care for almost 2,000 Minnesotans for a year in an assisted living facility. Often called adult day centers where the elderly can be taken to be with other elderly on a part time basis.

We could care for over 3,500 Minnesotans for a year part time with a Personal Care Assistant. Provide companion, bathing, housekeeping, cooking and other routine assistance consistent with activities of daily living.

Better yet, why don’t we take the extra $57 million and put it to use to rebuild the Veterans nursing home dilema. The entire yearly budget for the state funded Vets homes is only $36 million and we would have plenty of change left over. Just a thought.

It’s good to know, Aspirience Home Care can help you with qualified home care.

Preventing Elder Abuse

Monday, September 17th, 2007

Author

Thomas Wiest

CEO, Aspirience Home Care

Elder abuse once again slips into the news as I was watching a news story of a home worker repeatedly striking a bed bound 90 year old gentleman for whom she was providing care.

Will we let our outrage fade into the background until it happens to our loved one? Will we learn from this event and be prepared when it is our father needing care?

A daughter, needing help for her father while she worked, hired the worker directly, not using the services of a home care company.

This is an all too familiar story: adult children trying to do the best they can to take care of their parents and, at the same time, deal with their own growing family and becoming the victims of unqualified caregivers.

Minnesota is aging rapidly, and soon 25 percent of our state’s population will be elderly. By the year 2030, the number of Minnesotans over the age of 65 will double from where it is at today.

Spouses, daughters and sons, grandchildren and others who have the responsibility to make decisions about who will be caring for a loved one have a better choice about whom to invite into their home, the right home care company.

Minnesota is fortunate to have a large number of qualified home care companies across the state that provide a variety of programs and services employing workers who have had training, had their backgrounds checked and who are given ongoing oversight and supervision.

Home care companies provide services funded by Medicare, Medicaid, insurance policies and private funds. Most home-care companies operate under state and federal regulations and have oversight of their programs and operations by the Department of Human Services.

Many of the companies that do not provide federal- and state-funded services adhere to national standards for the employment of workers and the operations of the home-care business.

But calling a home-care company is not enough. The consumer or purchaser of home care services must make informed decisions, asking questions and demanding answers, requiring documentation and reading the “fine print.”

With an aging population and a workforce shortage, the problem of elder abuse is bound to get worse. Using the services of professional home care companies, being informed about service options and taking advantage of the resources to minimize risk are a few of the ways to prevent elder abuse of any kind.

It’s good to know, Aspirience Home Care can help you with qualified home care.

Verterans Home Under Fire - Part II

Monday, September 10th, 2007

Author

Thomas Wiest

CEO, Aspirience Home Care

The board that runs the Minneapolis Veterans Home agreed last Thursday to spend an extra $671,000 over the next year as it seeks to resolve rule violations and complaints of inadequate health care.

Can you believe that, $671,000!

This spending includes $546,000 for another year of consulting work, on top of the work from last year, and up to $125,000 that will go to the Minnesota Department of Health for an outside monitor who the department will select to keep close tabs on the troubled home.

In return, the 402-bed facility can continue to operate.

In July, I wrote about the Veterans Home coming under fire and almost losing its license. Over the past two years, the state has cited the home for 67 rule violations and fined it $42,300 when nine of them weren’t corrected on time. The federal Department of Veterans Affairs found 33 violations last year.

Now they plan to spend $546,000 to a consulting company to tell them and us what we already know and $125,000 to someone to oversee that?

Jeff Johnson, Chairman of the Minnesota Veterans Homes Board was recently quoted as saying “We don’t really have a choice. We have to do this, spend the money.” Does everyone realize that almost 2% of the total $36 million budget for the Minneapolis home is being spent on consultants above?

“But we are not sacrificing care to pay for these services,” he said. “We’re improving care, and making sure the improvements will stick this time.”

What if it doesn’t stick? That question didn’t get anwered.

Governor Tim Pawlenty ordered the board in 2005 to hire a consultant to assess care at the five veterans homes. The consultant, Health Dimensions Group of Minneapolis, found care and leadership problems in Minneapolis but, no major problems at homes in Luverne, Silver Bay, Fergus Falls and Hastings.

Last February, after inspectors found that three veterans at the Minneapolis home died after neglect or medical errors, Pawlenty ordered the Health Department to begin monitoring its day-to-day operations until a consultant could take over. Health Dimensions became that consultant.

The governor also set up a commission to investigate how to resolve decades of regulatory problems at the Minneapolis home and whether the system is governed properly. That commission expects to complete its work next month.

Under the board’s agreement with the Health Department on Thursday, the home will be given a two-year conditional license, which can be revoked if serious problems re-emerge.

It’s good to know, Aspirience Home Care can help you when others may not be able to.

What do you see?

Monday, August 27th, 2007

Author

Thomas Wiest

CEO, Aspirience Home Care

It still amazes me how many personal care assistant needs there are everywhere.

 

I was meeting someone at the Burnsville Center the other day and had some time on my hands.  I grabbed a cup of coffee and headed down to the food court to study some things.

 

As I was walking with my java in one hand and some paperwork in the other, here’s what I saw;

 

There was an older elderly woman being escorted by her walker.  You know the kind I mean, it has wheels on the two legs in front and usually two half cut tennis balls on the other two legs to help the walker glide better on surfaces. 

 

With a couple small packages at her side, she looked a bit lost as she was navigating her way around.  She stopped and took a pill box of medication out of her hand bag but, looked perplexed as to what to do next.  Should she take the pills now?   Is it the right time?  Are these the right pills even?

 

As I came down to the food court and found a place to sit and study, I saw a mother and daughter sitting together.  They were having lunch.  It appears they were having a very nice polite discussion of the recent rainy weather we’ve had. 

 

As I was sitting at a table nearby, the discussion turned to talks of caring for someone at home versus going into an institution like an assisted living center.  I don’t know if this was a relative, her husband, a neighbor or whom.  They were debating the benefits and the costs of the different home care avenues.  Which is the right choice?  How will I know I made the right choice?

 

Lastly, I wrapped up my study time and meeting and was walking out to the parking lot when I saw a young man in a motorized quadriplegic wheelchair hung up on one of the curbs.  He was moving his mouth piece back and forth, which controls the wheelchairs motion. 

 

Imagine being high centered in your car on a snow drift in a good Minnesota snowstorm, it’s the same thing.  He was frantically trying to free his vehicle but, to no avail.  I walked up and offered a hand of lifting the front end of his wheelchair off the curb so he could steer clear.  We smiled and nodded in thanks then we parted ways. 

 

The fact that is so startling is, if we just take a minute out of our day and look around, I mean really look around, it would amaze us how many personal care assistant needs there are everywhere, everyday.

 

It’s good to know, Aspirience Home Care can help you with all of them.