Ecumen Detroit Lakes to Celebrate New Wellness Center At May 6 Grand Opening

Ecumen Detroit Lakes will host an open house Wednesday, May 6, 2015, from 3 to 6 p.m., to celebrate the grand opening of its new Transitional Care Unit and Rehabilitation Center.

The public is invited to visit for tours, demonstrations, music, food and beverages and an art exhibit featuring the work of Orville Running, who was professor of art for 40 years at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa. (A recent Detroit Lakes Online story gives colorful background on the art exhibit and the artist.)  

There will be a ribbon cutting ceremony at 4 p.m., conducted by the Detroit Lakes Regional Chamber of Commerce.

“We’re so excited to show the community our new state-of-the-art center,” said Janet Green, executive director of Ecumen Detroit Lakes.  “We’re proud to be offering the most up-to-date approaches to rehabilitation and therapy for those recovering from surgery, injury and illness.”

The new Transitional Care Unit and Rehabilitation Center was made possible by generous contributions from individuals, businesses and local foundations.  It features private treatment rooms, a therapy pool, steam shower, business center, snack shop and chapel. 

Ecumen Detroit Lakes is located at 1415 Madison Avenue in Detroit Lakes.  For more information go to www.ecumendetroitlakes.org.

 


Top 5 Blog Posts - May 4

Did you miss last week's most-read Changing Aging blog posts? Ecumen's online visitors found these articles most interesting:

New Ecumen White Paper Offers 5 Key Steps to Reducing Antipsychotics in Dementia Care
Senior care professionals and nursing homes are challenged to conform to the 2012 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services initiative to decrease off-label use of antipsychotics. In many cases, the struggle comes from within – initiating change and formulating an integrated and personalized approach to dementia care.

Caring.com: Managing Mom's Budget? An 8-Step Plan to Cover Your Bases
Managing a parent's finances can be complex and at times overwhelming. Caring.com's Senior Editor Melanie Haiken shares her eight-step plan.

Helping Older Americans for the Next 50 Years: What's it Going to Take?
This year marks the 50th anniversary of Medicare, Medicaid and the Older Americans Act.  During that time, lawmakers have constantly tinkered to keep the programs up-to-date as the nation has gotten grayer and issues facing aging Americans have changed dramatically.

Ecumen-Managed 'The Classic at Hillcrest Greens' in Altoona, Wisconsin to Open in Early July
Construction of The Classic at Hillcrest Greens in Altoona, Wisc., is well underway, and the new senior living community managed by Ecumen plans to open in early July.  The sales office, located at 1316 Cypress Drive in Altoona, is now open and taking early deposits. 

Ecumen Century Club: Happy 101st Birthday Lecil Arends

You can read these articles and more at ecumen.org.


Caring.com: Managing Mom's Budget? An 8-Step Plan to Cover Your Bases

Managing a parent's finances can be complex and at times overwhelming. Caring.com's Senior Editor Melanie Haiken shares her eight-step plan that provides logical guidance in, "Managing Your Parents' Finances: Managing Mom's Budget? An 8-Step Plan to Cover Your Bases."

Here's an excerpt from the story:

Managing your own money isn't easy under the best of circumstances, so it's not surprising that most people feel overwhelmed when it's time to step in and take over the management of their parents' finances. But as is the case with any large project, what feels impossibly complex taken as a whole becomes much more manageable when broken into parts. So, let's start at the beginning, and separate the process of managing your parents' finances into sequential steps. Done this way, all you have to do is put one foot in front of the other, and you're on your way.

1. Locate All Accounts and Documents
Your first responsibility as your parents' financial manager is to do some sleuthing. If your parents are competent to discuss their finances, get a head start by asking them these five basic questions about their finances. Then start going through files -- you want a clear picture of every asset they have. Start with savings and checking accounts, retirement accounts, investment accounts, and pensions. But that's just the beginning..."

Read more: Managing Your Parents' Finances: Managing Mom's Budget? An 8-Step Plan to Cover Your Bases


Helping Older Americans for the Next 50 Years: What’s It Going To Take?

This year marks the 50th anniversary of Medicare, Medicaid and the Older Americans Act.  During that time, lawmakers have constantly tinkered to keep the programs up-to-date as the nation has gotten grayer and issues facing aging Americans have changed dramatically.

Read more


New Ecumen White Paper Offers 5 Key Steps to Reducing Antipsychotics in Dementia Care

Senior care professionals and nursing homes are challenged to conform to the 2012 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services initiative to decrease off-label use of antipsychotics. In many cases, the struggle comes from within – initiating change and formulating an integrated and personalized approach to dementia care.

Ecumen, a pioneer in changing the culture of care for those with Alzheimer’s and related dementias, recently released a white paper titled, “Reducing Antipsychotics in Dementia Care: 5 Key Steps to Success,” based on its award-winning Awakenings™ program.  The white paper can be downloaded at www.EcumenAwakenings.org/5steps.

The five key steps outlined in the white paper are based on Ecumen’s five-year journey to reduce the use of highly-sedating antipsychotics in dementia care. Awakenings started as a small pilot in a remote northern Minnesota nursing home by two courageous and determined women who decided they could no longer tolerate the national norm of excessive use of chemical restraints on the nursing home residents.

Between 2010 and 2013, Ecumen Awakenings decreased the dosage or discontinued use of more than 1,000 psychotropic medications and reduced the use of antipsychotics among people with a diagnosis of psychosis by 97 percent.

Ecumen’s Awakenings program, which won the 2014 LeadingAge Excellence in Dementia Care Award, is used in all 15 Ecumen nursing homes. It is now being introduced to 14 assisted living communities.


Top 5 Blog Posts — April 27

Did you miss last week's most-read Changing Aging blog posts? Ecumen's online visitors found these articles most interesting:

Ecumen Century Club: Happy 101st Birthday Lecil Arends
Ecumen honors Lecil Arends, a resident of Ecumen Meadows in Worthington, Minn., who is 101.

Ecumen Pines Resident Hazel Runke Gives a Warm Welcome To Hutchinson’s Newborns
Hazel Runke, a resident at Ecumen Pines in Hutchinson, has found an important purpose in her life — welcoming newborn babies into the world with hand-knitted caps and booties.

Kylie Johnson’s Astounding Feat at Ecumen Lamplighter Manor in Detroit Lakes
Kylie Johnson, the Housing Manager at Ecumen Lamplighter Manor in Detroit Lakes, braced herself.  The government auditor has just finished an extensive examination and was ready to report. The results were astonishing.

Ecumen Lakeshore Resident Bob McFarlin Recalls His Career as a State Legislator and Bridge Builder
Former State Rep. Robert (Bob) McFarlin, now a resident at Ecumen Lakeshore in Duluth, was a rarity in the Minnesota Legislature.  He was a bridge builder — in both his primary occupation and his political life.

Ecumen Century Club: Happy 100th Birthday Lucille Ekstrand 
Ecumen honors Lucille Ekstrand, a resident of Ecumen North Branch, who is 100.

You can read these articles and more at ecumen.org


Ecumen Lakeshore Resident Bob McFarlin Recalls His Career as a State Legislator and Bridge Builder

Former State Rep. Robert (Bob) McFarlin, now a resident at Ecumen Lakeshore in Duluth, was a rarity in the Minnesota Legislature.  He was a bridge builder — in both his primary occupation and his political life.

Read more


Ecumen Century Club: Happy 101st Birthday Lecil Arends

​Ecumen honors Lecil Arends,a resident of Ecumen Meadows in Worthington, Minn., who is 101.

Read more


Ecumen Pines Resident Hazel Runke Gives a Warm Welcome To Hutchinson’s Newborns

Hazel Runke, a resident at Ecumen Pines in Hutchinson, has found an important purpose in her life — welcoming newborn babies into the world with hand-knitted caps and booties.

Read more


Earth Day Shout-Out to an Eco-Conscious Worthington Agency for the Disabled

The Nobles County Developmental Achievement Center (DAC) in Worthington, Minn., does tons and tons of paper recycling in an enterprise that both helps the environment and helps people with disabilities.

On Earth Day, the Worthington Daily Globe tells DAC’s story of matching meaningful recycling with meaningful jobs.  Good work all around.