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Home >> News & Events >> Institute Presents at Eldercare Conference

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 7, 2006

Institute for Caregiver Education Presents at National Eldercare Conference

Institute Hosted Technology Experience at the Pioneer Network Conference

Philadelphia, PA— The Pioneer Network, a national organization dedicated to eldercare advocacy hosted a national conference in Philadelphia August 2- 4, 2006. A long-time supporter of the Pioneer Network, the Institute for Caregiver Education hosted a technology “experience,” delivered a pre-conference workshop and two additional seminars at the August event.

The Institute for Caregiver Education collaborated with Joe Angelelli of the Pioneer Network and Jack York of It’s Never Too Late to create an exhibit “experience” at the conference to showcase opportunities that technology can provide to elders in long term care settings. It’s Never Too Late is a program designed for elders in long term care settings to connect with family and friends through the power of the web, and provides elders with the adaptive equipment necessary to make their technological experience easier.

The Institute supported the attendance of four elders and their caregivers from Silver Lake Center in Bristol, PA at the exhibit. Silver Lake is involved in a current pilot program with the Institute for Caregiver Education and It’s Never Too Late. The exhibit kicked-off with a reception on Wednesday evening and enabled participants to observe the potential of interactive technologies to reinforce person-directed principles in long-term care settings and beyond.

Institute team members Carol Tschop and Jim Kinsey presented one of ten pre-conference intensives on Wednesday, August 2nd. Their four-hour seminar titled, “Lives Well-Lived: Person-Directed Community Life” provided a process for transforming traditional resident activities into a vital and life-affirming Community Life Program in which resident preferences and routines direct the course of each day.

In addition to the pre-conference offering, the Institute deliveried two conference seminars. The first was“Bridging the Gap: Mentoring for Residents and Team Members” presented by Myrna Eshleman and Jim Kinsey. This two-part, three-hour session presented an effective means of transitioning both elders and team members into their new community. The second session, “Flatten Organizational Silos by Implementing Neighborhood Teams,” was presented by Teresa McCann and Myrna Eshleman. Here participants explored implementing neighborhood teams, a pioneering practice that breaks down the typical, medical model nursing home into smaller and more manageable, community-oriented neighborhoods.

Over the last five years the IfCE team has educated hundreds of long-term care professionals on a myriad of Culture Change topics at such national conferences as ASA, NADONA, AAHSA, AHCA, ACHCA, The Pioneer Network, the VA Summit and numerous state associations. The Institute for Caregiver Education is currently a leading Culture Change educator for a number of state QIO organizations as they work with the 8th Scope of Work and CMS.

For more information technology experiences for elders or seminars presented by the Institute for Caregiver Education, please call 717-263-7766.