Senior care isn’t a single type of care.
In fact, it represents an entire spectrum, from community-based or in-home services designed to help seniors age in place, to lifestyle-focused communities that provide older people an easier-going, worry-free retirement, to residential nursing and memory care for elderly people who can no longer safely provide for themselves.
Many retirement communities today, like Episcopal Retirement Services’ Deupree House and Marjorie P. Lee centers in Cincinnati’s Hyde Park neighborhood, and Episcopal Church Home in Louisville, Ky. are continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs), providing services along the entire continuum of care that a senior might need as he or she ages.
We’ll walk you through each of the levels of care, so that you’ll understand what each entail when you’re searching for the right care for yourself or your older loved one.
Welcome to Senior Care 101!
Let’s start with the most basic care we provide:
Home-Based Services
You’re recovering from illness, injury, or surgery and need ongoing nursing and physical therapy as you continue to heal.
You can live safely on your own, but you don’t drive anymore, have difficulty finding reliable transportation and need the extra nutritional support afforded by meal and grocery delivery.
Or, you’re aging at home, but have a complex medical or prescription regimen to follow, and need a little extra help keeping all your appointments, medication refills, insurance requirements and hospital billing sorted out.
These are all services we provide, or can help you to connect with.
When we release our short-term physical rehabilitation patients home from Marjorie P. Lee, for example, our case managers work with them, their family caregivers and the Council on Aging for Southwest Ohio to arrange prompt follow-up care from in-home nurses, and/or licensed physical, occupational, or respiratory therapists.
Our Deupree Meals On Wheels service brings meals and groceries to (and performs critical wellness checks on) thousands of seniors living on Cincinnati’s east side.
And our Living Well Senior Solutions case managers and Parish Health Ministry work with Tristate families and congregations alike to ensure older people receive the care and services they need to safely age in place.
Independent Living
Some retirees just want to worry about less.
They don’t want to mow their lawns, stay up on their home’s maintenance, or keep up with the cleaning. They don’t want to pay property taxes or keep track of all their monthly utility bills anymore.
Maybe they still drive, but are ready to downsize out of their current homes and live in a townhome or senior apartment community, where they can meet and socialize with people their own age.
Maybe they don’t drive anymore, and want to live in a community that offers them complimentary transportation to and from shopping areas, medical appointments, group outings and entertainment destinations.
That’s what independent living, in a premier retirement community like Deupree House or Louisville’s Episcopal Church Home, is like. It’s not senior care, per se — it’s more like a bit of well-deserved, affordable pampering.
Assisted Living
Assisted living is for seniors who can function more or less independently, but who would benefit from support services like daily laundry, help with cooking and cleaning, mobility or dressing assistance, etc.
At some CCRCs, a move from independent living to assisted living might require a move to a different neighborhood, building, or wing within the community. But, here at ERS, many of our assisted living services are now provided to seniors in their current suites or apartments, necessitating no move at all.
Residential Skilled Nursing and Memory Care
These levels of care are for CCRC residents who can no longer live without close support. They may need feeding assistance, continuous medical monitoring, medication administration, bathing and hygiene support, and full mobility support.
Residential skilled nursing and residential memory care, in an ERS community like Deupree Cottages, represent the highest levels on our senior care continuum.
Although residents of our skilled nursing and memory support communities are often very ill or frail, they receive the person-centered, safe and dignified care they need to realize enriched, fulfilled lives for the remainder of their years.
Would you or your older loved one benefit from a care relationship with ERS?
Whatever your family’s need, we offer the level of care to meet it.
Talk with your family about your care wishes. Then, click here to contact us with your questions or request more information.