Did you see the Lehrer News Hour this evening, January 23, with the story about transformative nursing homes? Dr. Bill Thomas, geriatrician and nursing home reformer was interviewed in one of his “Green House” nursing homes in Lincoln, Nebraska.
The twelve-minute story highlights two primary characteristics of the Green House concept – characteristics of all transformative nursing homes. The first, making the nursing home HOME, with all the implications that follow. The residents interviewed testify to that. So do the front line workers in a more indirect but compelling way. From the transcript:
Ebmeier, Nursing Home Administrator, and the shahbazim, (plural for shahbaz, name for traditional certified nurse assistants), tell the story of one former Green House elder, Mary Valentine, who celebrated her 101st birthday in the Green House.
JOYCE EBMEIER, Administrator: One of the shahbazim went to her and said, "Well, Mary, what do you want to do? What shall we do so that you have a great birthday?" And she looked at the shahbaz and she said, "You know, what I really want is a margarita and a cigarette."
SUSAN DENTZER, Narrator: And that's what she got, as seen in this picture, taken as she and her daughter celebrated on the Green House's front porch. When Valentine died soon after that memorable day, the shahbazim were crushed. They told us that was the downside of life in the Green House, saying goodbye.
THOMAS COOPER, Shabaz: The night after she had passed, my dog (note the place of animals in this setting) went into her room, and jumped up on her recliner, and sat where Mary used to sit. That was really emotional for me, and for the whole group of shahbazim, and the whole team.
JOYCE EBMEIER, Administrator: Death gets harder in a Green House because, when you are smaller and when you are engaged in the way that the shahbazim are engaged in the lives of the elders they love so much, it is like losing your dearest family member.
The video shows a hanging plaque which reads: “In memory of Mary Valentine. May her spirit protect, nurture and sustain all who enter here.”
DR. BILL THOMAS: In long-term care, love matters. And the heart of the problem is institutions can't love.
At this point in the story, I experienced a strong resonance with Dr. Thomas’ differentiation between home and the institution. I was remembering the death of a friend in a nursing home early one morning just a couple of years ago. When the mortuary personnel came to remove the body, I accompanied them as they rolled the body-laden gurney down the long hall to the exit. My action was a conscious effort to form a kind of honor guard. As we passed the nurses station, the two employees sitting there, kept their heads down, apparently engrossed in paper work. Neither even looked up. Neither acknowledged the sacredness of the moment. Neither acted in a way that would indicate there had been a personal relationship with this person. I remember my feelings of shock and sadness. That is an example of “institution.” Institutions can’t love. Institutions that hold our elders need to be transformed into HOME.
The second characteristic of transformative nursing homes addressed in this story refers to improved physical and psychological functions. The video shows an elderly woman (age, 95) making her way with a walker with relative ease and confidence. Her daughter tells the interviewer that when her mother was living in a typical nursing home setting she had been bed bound. In this transformative nursing home, the daughter continues, “they started working with my mother. . .and it wasn’t very long before she could get up and take a few steps. And now, you can see she does pretty good (sic) with the walker getting around.”
The video spends some time on the financial aspect which, I believe, is more relevant to Green Houses as such, not transformative nursing homes generally. The Green House Project is a trademarked name and requires adherence to many particulars, including using Green House Project blueprints for the construction of each home. Generally, as Steve Shields, leader in the transformative nursing home movement has said publicly: the staffing is the same; the costs are distributed differently, but they are the same. Transformative nursing homes are budget neutral.
The story from Lincoln, Nebraska is heartening. There are not enough of these HOMES yet. We MUST liberate our elders from traditional nursing home and bring them HOME.
The transcript of this story from the Lehrer News Hour can be read at:
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health/jan-june08/nursing_01-23.html
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
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