You’ve Got To Have Heart To Do This Job: Honoring Ecumen’s Nursing Assistants
It’s an intensely challenging job. It’s a deeply rewarding job. It’s an absolutely critical job that not just anyone can do. But it does not get a lot of recognition.
The Nursing Assistants who take care of the frail elderly are a special breed who give compassionate care all day long to people who are at their most vulnerable.
This week is National Nursing Assistants Week, and Ecumen honors its 1,800 Nursing Assistants for their dedicated care and commitment. (Nursing Assistant is a general job category with many more specific job titles such as Certified Nursing Assistants (CNA), Resident Assistants, Home Health Assistants, Personal Care Attendants, Adult Day Services Assistants and Trained Medical Assistants.)
“This is an extremely important job,” says Anne Diekmann, Director of Nursing at Ecumen of Litchfield. “It is a noble calling and a career to be proud of.” Nursing Assistants do tasks like making sure residents get their meals, medication, therapy and personal care when they are supposed to, and they are always on call for any immediate needs residents have.
Diekmann says the 72 Nursing Assistants she supervises “are the eyes and ears of the Nursing Department. They are the people closest to the residents every day. They are the first line of everything. They notice when things aren’t right. They are keyed into every little detail. Without them, the nurses can’t do their jobs.”
Three Nursing Assistants at Ecumen of Litchfield gathered this week to talk about their jobs.
Jody Dilley, a Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA) for eight years, says, “It’s rewarding to help someone who cannot help themselves without expecting something in return.” She chose this career after taking care of her own mother, who was dying of cancer. “I knew I had found my calling,” she said.
And many Nursing Assistants refer to their jobs as a “calling.” Kelly Peipus has been a CNA for 30 years at Ecumen of Litchfield. She describes herself as an easy-going and patient person who finds that caregiving “just comes naturally.”
Missy Kielty, a CNA for 13 years, says she feels like she is “making a difference” as a caregiver. “I love interacting with the residents, hearing their stories and experiences,” she says. “The residents thank us all the time for what we do. They apologize for needing help, but we just tell them that’s exactly what we are here for.”
To be a Nursing Assistant, the group agreed, you need to be patient, sympathetic, compassionate and caring. And Anne Diekmann added a fifth qualification: integrity. “Nursing Assistants must be unconditionally trustworthy,” she says.
To honor the Nursing Assistants she supervises, Diekmann handed out “Survival Kits” with the following items and explanations:
Lifesavers: Because you are a REAL lifesaver!
Tissues: For those times you have to dry tears, even your own.
Snickers: To remind you that laughter really is the best medicine.
Sucker: To help you lick every problem.
Starburst Candy: For those times when you need a burst of energy.
Laffy Taffy: To remind you to laugh at times when you fell like crying.
Stick of gum: To help you stick with it and accomplish anything.
Mint: Because your compassion is worth a mint!
Rubber Band: For when you need to stretch beyond your limits.
And in big type at the end: NURSING ASSISTANTS ARE ALL HEART.
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Ecumen thanks and honors its Nursing Assistants — and all Nursing Assistants — for your compassionate care and selfless service to others.
Ecumen Bethany Community To Receive Top Business Award
For its impact on the Alexandria, Minn., area, the Ecumen Bethany Community will receive the 2014 Business and Industrial Appreciation Day (BIAD) Award from the Alexandria Area Economic Development Commission and Alexandria Lakes Area Chamber of Commerce. See the Echo Press’s story: Ecumen Bethany Receives 2014 BIAD Award
Seven Ways To Pay for Long-Term Care
How to plan and pay for long-term care — including assisted living, memory care, nursing home and at-home care — is one of the most daunting challenges the United States now faces. Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts is leading a national task force looking for a solution. Roberts maps out seven possible pathways to frame the complex debate along a continuum of public and private approaches.
Last Week's Top 5 Blog Posts- June 16
In case you missed one, here are the blog posts our online visitors found most interesting last week:
Fifty Years of Transformation at Ecumen Detroit Lakes
Ecumen Century Club: Happy 100th Birthday Albert Volk
Ecumen Century Club: Happy 101st Birthday Ethelyde "Toni" Rasmusson
D-Day Paratrooper, Now 93, Makes an Anniversary Jump
Ecumen Parmly LifePointes Prepares for 19th Annual Golf Tournament
To read more Changing Aging blog posts or to learn more about Ecumen, please visit ecumen.org!
Ecumen Century Club: Happy 101st Birthday Ethelyde “Toni” Rasmusson
Ecumen honors Ethelyde “Toni” Rasmusson, a resident at Ecumen of Litchfield, who is 101 today.
Fifty Years of Transformation at Ecumen Detroit Lakes
The 50-year history of Ecumen Detroit Lakes is a compelling story of transformation from nursing home to state-of-the-art community health care hub. Detroit Lakes Online tells the story of how in 1964 a community in dire need of a long-term care center pulled together, going door-to-door to raise the money. Now, a half century later, Ecumen Detroit Lakes is evolving into a national model for rural healthcare delivery. On June 20, Detroit Lakes will celebrate this story of civic involvement as it prepares for the next 50 years with the opening of the new Ecumen care center this fall.
Ecumen Parmly LifePointes Prepares for 19th Annual Golf Tournament
Ecumen Parmly LifePointes’ 19th Annual “Swingin’ for Parmly” golf tournament will take place on June 19 at Chisago Lakes Golf Course.
Each year community members, staff, partner companies and volunteers enjoy a day of golf to raise money for Ecumen Parmly LifePointes. Pictured below are participants from last year's event. This year, the proceeds will go towards buying a utility truck and snowplow that will be used to maintain the grounds.
Registration for the tournament will close June 16th. Please visit parmly.org for more information on registration and details. Contact Mara Krinke (651-257-7956) or Michelle Metzler (651-213-2744
) with questions.
Ecumen Century Club: Happy 100th Birthday Albert Volk
Ecumen wishes a happy birthday to Albert Volk, who is 100 today. He is a resident of Ecumen Pathstone Living in Mankato, Minn.
Last Week's Top 5 Blog Posts- June 9
In case you missed one, here are the blog posts our online visitors found most interesting last week:
94 Year Old Graduates High School, 78 years later
Ecumen's Plans for Senior Housing in Downtown Minneapolis Reported in Business Journal
Honoring D-Day: 70 Years Ago Today
Ecumen Century Club: Happy 101st Birthday Elrose Milverstedt
Ecumen Century Club: Birthday Greetings to Althea "Babe" Maloney, Age 101
To read more Changing Aging blog posts or to learn more about Ecumen, please visit ecumen.org!
D-Day Paratrooper, Now 93, Makes an Anniversary Jump
Jim “Pee Wee” Martin parachuted down over Utah Beach on D-Day 70 years ago and did it again over the same area last week. In addition to celebrating the D-Day anniversary, Martin wanted to make a point. “You don’t have to sit around and die just because you get old,” he said.
The video below records his jump.