Take Our Changing Aging Poll: Will Baby Boomers Be Called Seniors?
A colleague the other day and she thinks the word 'senior' or 'senior citizen' will go away and be replaced by 'boomer' when boomers become seniors. Her premise is that we will be known by our generational identities. So, when Gen Xers and Millennials become seniors, they’ll still be known as Gen Xers and Millennials.What do you think?Take our Poll.[poll id='4']
Senator Dean Barkley on Long-Term Care
I believe that we must provide additional resources to home care toreduce the need for nursing home care. Nursing homes should be a lastresort. We need to everything possible to allow elderly Americans theopportunity to stay in their homes.My Mother was forced into a nursing home three years ago. It was not apleasant experience. She did not want to go into the nursing home andwas very unhappy until her death. She was also forced to spend her lifesavings on paying for the service. There has to be a better way.
Long-Term Care Financing Reform: It’s All About Bi-Partisanship
Here’s something America needs much more of. A Democrat and a Republican coming together to work together on issues. In today’s Minneapolis Star Tribune, Republican State Rep. Laura Brod and Democratic State Rep. Paul Thissen discuss aging services financing reform. The full text is below.Want to read more on this subject?: Download Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts' White Paper in our Successful Aging Library.
Long-Term Care Financing Reform: A Fiscal and Health Care Necessity
September 18, 2008
Has Behavior Changed Toward You Since You’ve Gotten Older?
New York Times reporter John Leland would like your help for an upcoming article in The Times about the small daily insults that can come with getting older. Recently he got an this e-mail from a reader:
I am offended when first-named by children, strangers and receptionists (often in their teens); what they consider “friendly” I consider false intimacy. Strangers have begun to call me “dear” and “sweetie,” things they would never in a million years call a woman in her forties or fifties. The assaults are terrible and ongoing and people **mean well.** But they treat the elderly as if aging were a joke. I actually said to someone I may be old but I’m not stupid.
If you have a story you’d like to share, go here and click on the email post at the bottom of Jane Gross' New Old Age Blog.
Thanks.
Health Care Homes: Transforming Chronic Care for Boomers and Beyond
You are invited to the discussion (title above) as part of the Minnesota Department of Human Services Transform 2010 Boomers Mean Business Forum. This session, which is filling fast, will be Friday, October 3 from 8:30 to noon at the Minnesota Department of Human Services Elmer L. Andersen building in Saint Paul. Pre-registration is required. Go to the link above for more information and to register.
ALVA - Leadership Development for the Rest of Your Life
Ecumen is proud to support ALVA. It’s a Minnesota leadership development program by the Vital Aging Network for experienced adults who are interested in providing leadership for the common good. ALVA is focused on helping people discover their unique path to leadership and develop the skills you need to be successful. For more information and tuition costs, go here.
ALVA courses are being offered in three locations around Minnesota €” Century College in White Bear Lake, Inver Hills Community College in Inver Grove Heights, and Northwest Technical College in Bemidji€”starting October 10, 2008. Classes meet one Friday a month from 8:30 AM to 3:30 PM and will be connected via interactive TV.
This life-changing course is designed for leadership in later life and empower people to find new ways to use their leadership skills.
- Discover your lifework
- Understand the opportunities and barriers of leadership in later life
- Plan and implement a civic leadership project
- Build an ongoing network for sharing ideas, knowledge, and resources
Ecumen Talks Future of Aging on Almanac
On Friday night, Ecumen participated in a panel discussion with the Vital Aging Network and Minnesota’s first state demographer Hazel Reinhardt on the future of aging in Minnesota on Twin Cities Public Television’s popular public affairs show Almanac. The show aired on Friday. You can watch the 10-minute clip here by clicking on the Sept. 12th show and The Future of Aging link.
Senate Candidate Al Franken Announces Long-Term Care Financing Initiatives
On Friday, Democratic Senate candidate Al Franken talked long-term care, announcing several proposals at Lyngblomsten senior community in Saint Paul. Here are ideas he raised:
- Give families or caregivers a $2,000 tax credit to help pay for long-term care needs.
- A $1,200 tax credit for businesses to offset costs of providing long-term care.
- Make federal long-term care reimbursements more flexible so seniors' costs could be equally paid whether they live in senior housing, nursing home or their homes. The campaign estimates that would save $25 billion every year, in part because home care is less expensive than nursing home care.
(Smart move to focus on people’s desire to live at home and have choice and the ability for government to save money by doing it.)Q&A With CandidateWe’re seeking insignts from all of the major party U.S. Senate candidates on aging and long-term care. Al Franken responses to Changing Aging’s questions are here.
Riding into the Weekend
Here’s a photo to put you in a frame of mind for the weekend. Earlier this year Ecumen customer Evelyn Bonnes of New Richmond, Wis., celebrated her 93rd birthday by going motorcycle riding in Mesa, Az. through the red rock foundations. Here’s to riding into the weekend and Living Fully After 90! Have a good one!P.S. I heard from a number of readers that the link to Ecumen CEO Kathryn Roberts' long-term care financing paper wasn’t working. Thanks for the heads up. And my apologies. It’s been fixed and you can download it and other articles here.
New Long-Term Care Financing White Paper Provides Candidates Ingredients for Change
Long Term Care Financing Reform: An Incredible Opportunity for Candidates Who Desire Positive Change in America' is the latest white paper written by Ecumen’s CEO Kathryn Roberts, PhD. It’s a must-read for people and candidates for public office who desire innovation in Federal and State public policy.Want to learn more? Here are 10 Reasons Long-Term Care Financing Reform Must Occur.