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Age Wave Innovation: 12 People Who Are Changing Aging in the United States

While there are many more than 12 people who are Changing Aging' across the United States, here are 12 that Kelly Greene of the Wall Street Journal focused upon on Friday. At Ecumen, we’ve had the pleasure to work with two of them: Eric Dishman, who heads up innovation in Intel Corporation’s Digital Health Group, and Dr. William Thomas, the Dr. Spock of Aging and who also authors a 'Changing Aging' blog. When you look at the areas they identify, you see key areas for innovation and 'Changing Aging' in America:- Technology- Housing- Financial Planning- Work- Volunteerism- Transportation- Community Planning and Design- Wellness and Health Care- Lifelong Education- Public Policy


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Google Gets It. Kudos This Valentines Day!

google-valentines.gifA Salute to Google. Check out their graphic this Valentine’s Day. Aging is all about living.


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What’s a New Name for Adult Day Care?

When I think of day care, I think of the place that I drop my child off in the morning. There has to be other, better names for this growing service. Any ideas? Posted by Eric Schubert


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What Do We Spend More on in the U.S. - Aging or Defense?

What do you think we spend more on in the United States? Defense or Aging?Today the federal government spends more on seniors than on any other group or program. According to the U.S. Office of Management and Budget and research by USA Today, last year, states paid $27 billion of the $979 billion in senior benefits, primarily for Medicaid payments to nursing homes (Guess where boomers don’t want to live? Guess what the average cost of a nursing home nationally is: $75,000)Look at last year’s federal break down on senior benefits (Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid) and defense in the U.S.:Senior benefits: $952.3 billion (doesn’t include the $27 billion paid by states) (This is almost 35% of the federal budget.)Defense: $552.5 billion (Just over 20% of the federal budget)


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Aging and Technology Talk on Voice of America

voatv_bakkenist-testifying.jpegvoatv-hacker-at-mpower30jan.jpegVoice of America, which airs to 115 million people worldwide, did a very nice story on Ecumen’s visit to Capitol Hill a couple of weeks ago, where Kathy Bakkenist, COO and senior vice president of strategy and operations; and Ecumen customer Honor Hacker testified on aging and technology before members and staff of the U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging. You can read the story or listen to the radio broadcast below.Listen to the VOA Story audio clip


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Goodbye to Yesterday’s Senior Center, Hello to Today’s Successful Aging Center at Parmly LifePointes

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Xz2g6C1e8E[/youtube]The temperature might not get above zero today here in the Land of 10,000 very frozen lakes. But that isn’t going to deter a bunch of people from their 50s into their 90s from heading to Vitalize! Wellness Centre at the Ecumen community of Parmly LifePointes, which is built on the shores of one of those frozen lakes in Chisago City, Minn.Vitalize! visitors are partaking in a whole different kind of 'senior center.'

  • Vitalize! is a successful aging center that takes a holistic approach to aging by focusing on the tenets of successful aging: physical, intellectual, spiritual, emotional, and vocational wellness.
  • It promotes self-empowerment and takes a proactive approach to aging rather than a reactive one.
  • Unlike so many fitness chains nationally, programming is focused on older adults rather than younger ones and is used by people of all physical levels from marathon runners to people receiving care at Parmly’s care center and rehab center. Spandex and Techno Rock aren’t the focus here … substance, learning new things and feeling good in an empowering environment… .are.
  • Vitalize! draws members from the Parmly LifePointes community and the surrounding area, helping to create a culture of successful aging.
  • Vitalize! includes:
  • Aquatic Center: Warm water lap pool and a separate therapy pool (like the pro teams use) with underwater treadmill. Both use a natural salt sanitizer for ease on the skin.TechnoGym: SmartKey technology creates a personalized, virtual trainer for a person to track their fitness plan and progress. Includes treadmills, cardio waves, syncro-elliptical trainers, and strength training equipment.Wellness and Exercise Classes: A trainer sets up personalized training plans and members can access a plethora of classes, including yoga, aerobics, water fitness, water walking, and nutrition.'Hungry Mind' Classes: Classes from politics to spirituality from tai chi to great authors help feed the minds of lifelong learners.Massage: Members can get hands-on massage or visit an automated warm-water massage tableRuben’s Cafe: Named after LifePointes’ Senior Olympian and swimmer Ruben Berg, Ruben’s Cafe is a place to gather with friends for a sandwich or salad. Serenity Garden: Great place to relax and enjoy the tranquility (but you probably want to do it on a summer day rather than today).


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    Kathryn Roberts to Discuss Age Wave of Opportunity at Carlson School of Management

    Kathryn Roberts, CEO and President of Ecumen, will be discussing 'The Age Wave of Opportunity' next Friday, Feb. 15 from 12 noon to 1:30pm at the Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA) Housing Forum, Carlson School of Management, Rm. L-110 (Honeywell Auditorium), University of MN - West Bank. RSVP to 612-625-2086 or curahf@umn.edu by Feb. 13A map is available at http://onestop.umn.edu/Maps/CarlSMgmt/.The CURA Housing Forum is a discussion of housing issues and research sponsored by the Center for Urban and Regional Affairs (CURA) at the University of Minnesota. For more information, please contact Adrienne Hannert at 612-625-2086.


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    Strip Clubs and Financing Long-Term Care

    When we talk at Ecumen about changing how America finances long-term care and aging services, this isn’t what we’re talking about … .From today’s St. Petersburg Times:Two Tampa Bay area lawmakers want to put a $1 tax on strip club admissions so they can give low-income nursing home residents more spending money. Rep. Rick Kriseman, D-St. Petersburg, said he got the idea after an elderly constituent complained that a $35 monthly stipend for Medicaid recipients was not enough to cover personal needs, such as haircuts, clothing and movie tickets. 'I’m sorry if I’ve taken a dollar that you would have otherwise stuck in someone’s garter,' said Kriseman, who is sponsoring the legislation with Sen. Ronda Storms, R-Brandon.


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    Citizens League’s Focus on Aging: It’s All About People, Not Experts

    Yesterday we wrote about the fragmentation in public policy around aging. The Citizens League in Minnesota, which is one of the country’s top non-partisan citizen engagement and public policy organizations is taking a different approach to aging policy as part of their MAP 150 initiative, which is focused on big public policy issues in Minnesota’s Sesquicentennial Year.Here’s how they describe the approach, which will begin at the League’s Feb. 28th Policy Open House event:

  • Long-term care policy design workshop - While there is broad consensus that the current long-term care system is inadequate and anachronistic, reform efforts are having trouble gaining any traction. The Citizens League has a hypothesis about why this might be so: most policy design efforts attempt to fix the system’s problems rather than people’s problems. This policy design workshop will take a different approach. We will start with users' needs (or a 'market assessment') and try to identify a 'product' for the long-term care system that can meet these needs. We will also specify the features of that product so that system designers have a set of ground rules by which to develop the product.
  • Ecumen is sponsoring the first phase of this project. However, we have no clue what the outcome will be. And that’s the beauty of the Citizen League’s work - it’s transparent, independent, citizen-based work - You can’t buy an outcome. They’ve done incredible work on some of Minnesota’s biggest public policy issues, including a report about 12 years ago on the future of aging in Minnesota. It helped to bring focus to aging services policy and enhance opportunities for independence for more seniors. What also is interesting is how they bring people together to help shape solutions that you would think would never sit down with each other.To learn more about this project and participate in it, go here. Changing Aging readers from around the country can follow it on their web site and we’ll provide periodic updates.


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    Aging, the American Voter and the Inertia of Fragmentation

    A few stats this Super Tuesday: … .About one in five votes in the 2004 presidential election was cast by someone 65 or older. By 2040, about 40 percent of voters will be 65 or older.Imagine if there were a successful aging platform' in America or in individual states, one that was about