Neighborhood News - Homewood Retirement Centers
Transcription
Neighborhood News - Homewood Retirement Centers
MAGICIAN COMING TO WOODLANDS Dave Thomen, a CBS News “Baltimore’s Best Magician” and National Theater “Stars of Magic” recipient, is 100% pure entertainment fun for your guests! He has a proven track record of success performing at 300 private and corporate events each year. Delighted clients include the Baltimore Ravens, Maryland State Police and Fox 45 news. He is now coming to Homewood at Frederick to perform during the July Woodlands Assisted Living Birthday Party on July 11, 2014 at 2:30 p.m. in the Gardenview Room. Be prepared to smile! Homewood at Frederick DATE CHANGE… SUMMER SPLASHIN’ FASHION SHOW Please mark your calendars! This year’s Summer Spashin’ Fashion Show on the Willows will now take place on Saturday, August 2nd at 10:30am. Children, up to the age of 10 years old, are invited to participate, donning their favorite (and even wild!) summer/beach outfits and accessories. Please RSVP to Denise McDonough at 301644-5627 by 6/15/14 if you would like one or more of your young loved ones to participate. Please include each child’s gender and age as well. Details will be provided in an upcoming invitation. July 2014 NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS A Newsletter For Our Residents and Their Families Meet Greg Lescalleet, Director of Maintenance One of the perks of being a reporter for The CHATTER is getting to meet interesting people. Greg Lescalleet, our new Director of Maintenance, is right at the top of the “interesting” list! His response to my claim would be that “90% of the people you meet make up for the 10% you wish you had never met,” and that is so-o-o true! Vernon Rippeon Greg is a busy, busy man, but he took time to chat with me. His job is to oversee the maintenance of all the equipment and machinery, the grounds and the security of the campus. That’s a mighty full plate! I saw him in action as a take-charge kind of guy whose motto is “Lead, follow – or get out of my way.” 7407 WILLOW ROAD FREDERICK, MD 21702 Contact us at (301) 644-5600 www.Homewood.com The Homewood management has hired another pleasant chap who will blend well with the other outstanding employees who keep Homewood at Frederick running like a clock. Before coming to Homewood, Greg was Director of Plant Operations at Diakon Lutheran Social Ministry in Ravenwood Lutheran Village, and the Village of Robinwood at Hagerstown, Maryland, which were three miles apart. Greg was born in Hanover, Pennsylvania. He graduated from Anne Arundel Senior High School in Gambrill, Maryland, and later attended community colleges (Anne Arundel, Howard and Pikes Peak) while he was in the U.S. Air Force maintaining the Titan missiles. He lives in State Line, Pennsylvania with his wife, Leslie. They have two sons and two granddaughters, ages four and two, with a third grandchild due on July 1. Nichols’ Notes Eric T. Nichols, Executive Director The Homewood at Frederick 13th Annual Golf Classic was a big success this year. The weather going into the day was very questionable. The night before, storms came through Frederick that gave us a couple of inches of rain. The morning of the tournament was cloudy and threatened rain at any time. Even the forecast called for thunderstorms that afternoon. The tournament this year fell on my birthday. One of the best gifts I received was that no rain fell during the day and even the sun came out at about 3:00 pm for the golfers. This year’s golfing field was full with 36 foursomes. A delicious lunch of hamburgers and hotdogs was provided to the golfers after they registered to play. Just before noon, tournament announcements were made and, then at noon, the golfers headed out for a round of golf. With a full field of golfers like we had, sometimes the pace of play can be slow, but this year the flow of golfing was really good. Five hours later the golfers were coming off the golf course to a dinner of ribs and fried chicken. This has been our signature meal for our tournament for all 13 years. Jeff Hoffman and the kitchen crew did an outstanding job with the food again this year. Our coworkers, resident volunteers and auxiliary members who came to Glade Valley also did a tremendous job. I want to thank this year’s tee sponsors who include the following companies and individuals: Platinum Tee sponsors: Wagman Construction and Rogers Consulting Gold Tee sponsors: Noelker and Hull, M&T Bank, Potomac Pharmatech, and Crabapple’s Deli Silver Tee sponsors: Crawford Advisors, Petersen’s House of Carpet, and Classic Landscaping Bronze Tee sponsor: Gaver Properties Practice Range sponsor: Shirley Erdmanis in Memory of Ansis Erdmanis, Larry and Shirley Sibernagle, and Cole Family Dentistry Putting Green sponsor: Shirley Erdmanis in Memory of Ansis Erdmanis, and Paul Mellott Also I want to thank all of you who purchased tee signs and golf cart signs. With everyone’s help we grossed over $40,000 this year at the tournament, making this one of our most successful tournaments. Fellowship, food and golf (and no rain) made for a wonderful afternoon that was the 13th Annual Homewood at Frederick’s Golf Classic. LIBRARY NEWS When using the 2nd Floor/Cafe and 3rd Floor Libraries, please remember to date and sign the card in the back of the book, and place the card in the appropriate place. Upon returning books, place them on the cart (2nd Floor/Café) or window seat (3rd Floor). A member of the Library Committee will file the cards and return the books to their proper location. Homewood’s 4th Floor “Book Nook,” (the paperback library), welcomes contributions of fiction books (if copyrighted since 2004). Please leave them in the tray marked “Return Books.” While there, feel free to browse the shelves and take out another book. No sign-out card is necessary to borrow a paperback book. Just return the book when you are finished reading it. Auxiliary News Loberta Staley The Homewood Auxiliary voted to continue to fund the bingo games for the residents, to replenish the hospitality carts, to pay for the harpist for the Gratitude Circle, as well as help to fund summer decorations for the Willows, and to provide funds to help support the entertainment for National Nursing Home Week. The secretary, Diana Corl, sent a note of thanks for two donations received in memory of a former Homewood resident. Loberta Staley sent a note of thanks to the Homewood Auxiliary at Martinsburg, PA for hosting the General Auxiliary meeting on April 10. Various suggestions for fundraisers in 2014 were discussed. The Auxiliary plans to host an ice cream social on June 19, and a "Christmas in July" event on July 25. Further details will be posted as they progress. Don't miss these fun events. Peggy Chaney and Lauren Burton continue their plans for the annual Fall Tea in October. Stay tuned for additional information. The Auxiliary sold 57 box lunches during the annual Vision Health Fair in May. They proved to be quite a hit during lunch time. Homewood’s Auxiliary will host a “Christmas in July” box lunch on Friday, July 25, 11:00 am-1:00 pm, in the Community Center. Mrs. Claus will be present to help count down to the big day on December 25…only five months until Christmas…! Delicious holiday gourmet box lunches ($8.00) will be available (proceeds benefit our Auxiliary), as well as special ice cream treats! Casual seating will be provided in the MP Room and the Café, or supporters can take their lunches to a shady spot outside. Mrs. Claus will bring her fun-filled Christmas “treasures” that she has collected over the years. Homewood’s Harmonizers will provide live Christmas music. Did You Know ? Bocce Ball Court is located in the Green parking lot. Courts are available anytime. The balls are in the case under the bench. The Auxiliary will generate an informational brochure about the Auxiliary. Cathy Stull, Lauren Burton and Loberta Staley will work on this project. Ping Pong Table and Billiards are available anytime and are located in the Mountainview Lounge in Assisted Living (3rd Floor) . The Auxiliary is starting to plan for its Annual Meeting to be held on September 23. We hope to have an interesting guest speaker. Mark your calendar now to attend this event. Horseshoes Pits are located by the playground near the creek. The shoes are kept in the Wellness Center. You may use them anytime. IPODS NEEDED!!! If you have old IPod Nanos or IPod Shuffles that you no longer use, please consider donating them to our new Music and Memories Program. Contact Julie Norris 301-644-5639. More info to come on this exciting new program in the August issue of Neighborhood News. JOTTINGS Walking along Woodlands’ endless hallway, I saw Martha Thomas leaving her apartment, probably heading for a walk in the morning sunshine, because she was wearing a hat—a perky little white hat with red polka dots. Whoops! Those are not polka dots. They’re ladybugs. Lots of little ladybugs sprinkled over her hat. Surely there must be lots of good luck heading her way! The Woodlands Gallery has been getting some attention, with a new selection of work by local artists now on display. However, a work of art by residents participating in the Learn-about-theArtist, Try-to-Mimic-a-Technique class, stole the show for a while. Class members learned about artist Kim Ellery, and were inspired by her “Birds on a Wire” at a recent meeting. There was a large attendance that day—when Beth put ALL the colors of paint out on the big table, gave each person five paper birds (pre-cut), and told everybody to let themselves go—be realistic, imaginative, whatever! The resulting work was framed and hung on the wall in the hallway just outside the Woodlands Activity Room. It attracted little gatherings of viewers from the time it appeared. They, no doubt, noticed that some of the birds escaped being confined to life in a frame. When we were getting those March winds and April showers in May, we were sad to see the beautiful blossoms falling to the ground. We looked at the sad scene from the tree house windows, and then, a bright note brought cheer to all when one of the many viewers, seeing those little piles of fallen blooms, said: “Oh, we have puddles of blossoms!” And there they were—all of those puddles of white—fallen, but still beautiful. Mary Kay Kidder Board Games, as Requested Board games are making a comeback, my friends here at Homewood tell me. And that’s not just here among retired folks, but all over the map and in various age groups. They say there is even a board game scholarship being offered by one college. Well, the Woodlands Activity Department is in the loop. “Board Games” is one of the newer activities being offered here now. It was added to the program, according to Beth, because residents requested it. It seems to be off to a good start. Board Games sessions are held on the first Tuesday of each month in the Woodlands Activities Room. At a recent meeting, they played Apples to Apples. This game was chosen for the occasion because Beth and Michelle, and some of the residents in attendance that day, knew how to play the game. “It’s a game for all ages and all for fun,” they explained, “and when you play it, you get to express your opinion—and your opinion really counts!” Doesn’t that sound good? They started things with a game called Shut the Box, which somehow sounds more like the end than the beginning. But, a beginning it was, and it seems to have been a good one. I remember what fun we had playing the board game, Parcheesi, when I was growing up during the Great Depression. Do you remember Parcheesi? That’s one of the games coming up for this new activity. Remember— first Tuesday of each month! Mary Kay Kidder LUNCH AND LEARN #1 Pat Morgan What happens if you find yourself in Homewood’s health care system? The Admission Team members addressed this and other questions on Monday, June 9, at the first program in the Lunch and Learn series. Chicken salad and peach cobbler were served to a wall-to-wall crowd in the Multi-Purpose Room. Admissions Coordinator Rhonda Runion, Admissions Nurse Patty Henry, Director of Nursing Vicki Keriakos, and Social Services Co-workers Linda Proctor and Dore Ackermann presented an outline of procedures that generally apply to a resident’s stay in the Health Care Center. Some important points from their presentations bear repeating. Residents who find themselves defined as patients in Homewood’s health care system need not gripe, grumble or growl when they encounter seemingly repetitive procedures or senseless rules. Instead, be grateful, because the Health Care Center is required to observe state and federal regulations for a patient’s safety and comfort to be eligible as a skilled nursing facility. During the Q&A portion of the Lunch and Learn #1 program, considerable discussion ensued about how a patient is admitted to a hospital and how that affects whether a patient qualifies for Medicare Part A coverage. Residents would be wise to read a quotation from the 2014 Medicare & You, The Official U.S. Government Medicare Handbook, published by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Section 3, Page 32, under the heading Hospital care (inpatient). The paragraph begins: “Important! Staying overnight in a hospital doesn’t always mean you’re an inpatient.” The partial definition for Medicare Part A coverage, “a 3-day minimum medically necessary inpatient hospital stay for a related illness or injury,” appears on Page 33. Expect to hear more information on July 14 when Lunch and Learn #2 presents “Medicare Part A and Preplanning Your Rehab Stay” led by Homewood staff members Tiffany Gregory, Assessment Coordinator, and Rhonda Runion, Admissions Coordinator. Remember to sign up for lunch. Our Homewood Student Volunteer Team for Summer 2014 Cathy Stull When you spot an energetic young person in the Homewood hallways….chances are it’s a member of our Student Volunteer Team! These students are ages 14-21 and they are here to make our summer even brighter! Hats Off to the Team! Caitlin Davis Tyler Martin Thomas Morris Bethany Norris Jeremy Warrenfeltz Molly Weber Daniel Yoon Edward Yoon Family Council Herb Hoffman and Stan Schweinfurth The Family Council at Homewood at Frederick is a group of friends and family members who commit time and talent to work together to improve the quality of life for nursing home residents. All Homewood residents are welcome to participate. The Family Council has been busy the last few months interacting with the new Director of Nursing, Vicki Keriakos, to learn about the procedures she has adopted, or is developing, for the care of residents in and the general operations of the Health Care units. To be employed by Homewood as a Nurse’s Aide, an applicant must have completed a two-year course in the vocation. A well-recommended course for nurse’s aides is offered by the Frederick Public Schools. This course is taken over a two-year period during general schooling. An internship over a five-month period is also offered. In addition to this training, in order to be able to work in a retirement health care facility in Maryland, all nurses and aides must have geriatric certification. Furthermore, Maryland requires all staff to complete eight hours of specialized dementia training within 90 days of hire when working in a retirement health care facility. When all of this is accomplished, an aide will have a nametag with CNA or GNA printed on it. Homewood encourages schools to use Homewood as a real-life training facility. This allows Health Care unit personnel to observe the performance of students, and enables Homewood to offer employment to people who have been observed for 40 hours and considered good future employees. Chaplains’ Corner Chaplain Suzanne Morris The devotional writing featured on the breakfront in the Community Center encourages us to savor summer. Summer is the season for savoring vine ripened tomatoes, juicy watermelon, ice cream, baseball games, fireworks, picnics, family reunions, trips to the beach and beyond, lightning bugs...The list of blessings we receive at this time of year goes on and on. I hope you are well on your way to savoring the special summer delights you enjoy most. Each Sunday in our chapel services, we sing of God’s many blessings and give thanks for the life we share. Throughout July and August, we’ll take the time to sing some of your favorite hymns. Feel free to add a hymn you would like to have featured during worship to the sign-up sheet in the back of the Chapel. The Religious Life Committee is always mindful of children in our community for whom summer brings added challenges. For several years we have supported the SOWAC (Summer Outreach Walkersville Area Churches) program which provides lunches, arts and crafts, and games for children at local parks in July and August. The children served are primarily those youngsters who rely on school lunches for their main source of nutrition throughout the school year. We have also made contributions to the Religious Coalition’s Family Emergency Shelter program as well as Hospice of Frederick County recently. The nursing care unit of Homewood at Frederick employs about 50 registered and licensed practical nurses, and about 100 certified nurse’s aides. We remain ever aware that the need for shelter, nutritious meals, nurture, care and comfort never takes a vacation. Thanks to your generosity, we are able to ensure that others will have something good to savor this summer as well. There is a new training plan for all Homewood community new hires. The plan means that all Homewood unit heads will explain to all new hires what each unit does. This will enable all new hires to become acquainted with the workings of Homewood at the beginning of their employment instead of slowly becoming acquainted with their new working environment. The Meditation Room that is being planned in the main hallway of the Community Center is beginning to take shape. We look forward to having a special space where residents, family members and co-workers can take some time apart to nurture their spirits and savor the Spirit’s presence. The new head of training in the Health Care Unit is Barbara Kunkle, a longtime employee of Homewood. She has worked several jobs in the Health Care Unit, has worked on the floor recently during the weekends and during the week, and comes to the job with a lot of enthusiasm, good clinical experience and many ideas for training staff. How Can Physical Therapy Help YOU? In addition to the training required of all employees, the Health Care Unit will soon begin additional training for new nurses and aides. It will consist of a 14-day specific orientation. The new nurse will have to complete a specific list of items during the 14 days while supervised by an experienced nurse. This new system will insure that the new nurse is exposed to the most important things that the job requires. The new nurse will be assigned a mentor who can answer questions that might come up in the future and someone who can also observe how the new hire is performing. A lot of training time will have to be dedicated to learning how to enter medical records into a digital format, which is required by the Affordable Care Act. It is hoped that dementia training can be increased this fall after the electronic system training ends. Family Council will meet again on Sept. 7th at 3:30pm in the Virts Lounge The American Heart Association recommends 30 minutes a day of aerobic exercise to help improve cardiovascular health and help extend life expectancy. Walking is a great way to help keep your heart, lungs, and overall body healthy, however, sometimes aches and pains can limit our ability to exercise. Physical therapists are experts in improving mobility and motion, and pain-free movement is crucial to your quality of daily life, your ability to pursue your favorite leisure activities, and so much more. Studies show that prolonged sitting can be unhealthy and that walking a little bit more each day can help reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke. Consistent movement can also maintain a healthier balance system and reduce the risk for falls which can lead to significant injury. So if you feel that your age, endurance, or pain limits your ability to work ask you physician for a prescription for physical therapy so that we can provide treatments to decrease pain, improve endurance, and improve your walking performance and tolerance.
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