October 21, 2011
Creating a Warm, Unique Living Environment
October 19, 2011
New Dining Practice Standards Finalized
10/18/2011 Provider Magazine
Patrick Connole
Page Content
The Pioneer Network has finalized new Dining Practice Standards, agreed to by 12 national clinical standard-setting organizations, for supporting individualized care and self-directed living versus traditional diagnosis-focused treatment for people living in nursing facilities, the group said on Monday.
The document includes the following new standards: Individualized Nutrition Approaches/Diet Liberalization; Individualized Diabetic/Calorie Controlled Diet; Individualized Low Sodium Diet; Individualized Cardiac Diet; Individualized Altered Consistency Diet; Individualized Tube Feeding; Individualized Real Food First; Individualized Honoring Choices; Shifting Traditional Professional Control to Individualized Support of Self Directed Living; and New Negative Outcome.
“The importance of these new agreed-upon clinical standards cannot be overstated as food and dining are an integral part of individualized care and self-directed living for people living in nursing homes,” the Pioneer Network said.
The organization will submit the new standards to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the long term care community at large.
It is anticipated that CMS will refer to the new standards of practice within long term care interpretive guidance where they fit as the agency usually refers to the current standards of practice set by the clinicians who work within the long term care field.
According to the Pioneer Network, food and dining are an integral part of individualized care and self-directed living for several reasons, including the complexity of food and dining requirements when advancing models of culture change, the importance of food and dining as a significant element of daily living, and because the most frequent questions and concerns CMS receives from regulators and providers consistently focus on dining and food policies in nursing homes.
“Therefore, we believe this area is one most in need of national dialogue if we are to improve quality of life for persons living in nursing homes while maintaining safety and quality of care,” the group said.
The recommendations were acted on in conjunction with funding from the Rothschild Foundation to the Pioneer Network in 2011, which allowed formation of the organization’s Food and Dining Clinical Standards Task Force. The task force is comprised of symposium experts, representatives from CMS’ Division of Nursing Homes, FDA, and CDC as well as national standard setting groups.
Download the new standards HERE.
The document includes the following new standards: Individualized Nutrition Approaches/Diet Liberalization; Individualized Diabetic/Calorie Controlled Diet; Individualized Low Sodium Diet; Individualized Cardiac Diet; Individualized Altered Consistency Diet; Individualized Tube Feeding; Individualized Real Food First; Individualized Honoring Choices; Shifting Traditional Professional Control to Individualized Support of Self Directed Living; and New Negative Outcome.
“The importance of these new agreed-upon clinical standards cannot be overstated as food and dining are an integral part of individualized care and self-directed living for people living in nursing homes,” the Pioneer Network said.
The organization will submit the new standards to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the long term care community at large.
It is anticipated that CMS will refer to the new standards of practice within long term care interpretive guidance where they fit as the agency usually refers to the current standards of practice set by the clinicians who work within the long term care field.
According to the Pioneer Network, food and dining are an integral part of individualized care and self-directed living for several reasons, including the complexity of food and dining requirements when advancing models of culture change, the importance of food and dining as a significant element of daily living, and because the most frequent questions and concerns CMS receives from regulators and providers consistently focus on dining and food policies in nursing homes.
“Therefore, we believe this area is one most in need of national dialogue if we are to improve quality of life for persons living in nursing homes while maintaining safety and quality of care,” the group said.
The recommendations were acted on in conjunction with funding from the Rothschild Foundation to the Pioneer Network in 2011, which allowed formation of the organization’s Food and Dining Clinical Standards Task Force. The task force is comprised of symposium experts, representatives from CMS’ Division of Nursing Homes, FDA, and CDC as well as national standard setting groups.
Download the new standards HERE.
The Pioneer Network has finalized new Dining Practice Standards, agreed to by 12 national clinical standard-setting organizations, for supporting individualized care and self-directed living versus traditional diagnosis-focused treatment for people living in nursing facilities, the group said on Monday.
The document includes the following new standards: Individualized Nutrition Approaches/Diet Liberalization; Individualized Diabetic/Calorie Controlled Diet; Individualized Low Sodium Diet; Individualized Cardiac Diet; Individualized Altered Consistency Diet; Individualized Tube Feeding; Individualized Real Food First; Individualized Honoring Choices; Shifting Traditional Professional Control to Individualized Support of Self Directed Living; and New Negative Outcome.
“The importance of these new agreed-upon clinical standards cannot be overstated as food and dining are an integral part of individualized care and self-directed living for people living in nursing homes,” the Pioneer Network said.
The organization will submit the new standards to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the long term care community at large.
It is anticipated that CMS will refer to the new standards of practice within long term care interpretive guidance where they fit as the agency usually refers to the current standards of practice set by the clinicians who work within the long term care field.
According to the Pioneer Network, food and dining are an integral part of individualized care and self-directed living for several reasons, including the complexity of food and dining requirements when advancing models of culture change, the importance of food and dining as a significant element of daily living, and because the most frequent questions and concerns CMS receives from regulators and providers consistently focus on dining and food policies in nursing homes.
“Therefore, we believe this area is one most in need of national dialogue if we are to improve quality of life for persons living in nursing homes while maintaining safety and quality of care,” the group said.
The recommendations were acted on in conjunction with funding from the Rothschild Foundation to the Pioneer Network in 2011, which allowed formation of the organization’s Food and Dining Clinical Standards Task Force. The task force is comprised of symposium experts, representatives from CMS’ Division of Nursing Homes, FDA, and CDC as well as national standard setting groups.
Download the new standards HERE.
The document includes the following new standards: Individualized Nutrition Approaches/Diet Liberalization; Individualized Diabetic/Calorie Controlled Diet; Individualized Low Sodium Diet; Individualized Cardiac Diet; Individualized Altered Consistency Diet; Individualized Tube Feeding; Individualized Real Food First; Individualized Honoring Choices; Shifting Traditional Professional Control to Individualized Support of Self Directed Living; and New Negative Outcome.
“The importance of these new agreed-upon clinical standards cannot be overstated as food and dining are an integral part of individualized care and self-directed living for people living in nursing homes,” the Pioneer Network said.
The organization will submit the new standards to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the long term care community at large.
It is anticipated that CMS will refer to the new standards of practice within long term care interpretive guidance where they fit as the agency usually refers to the current standards of practice set by the clinicians who work within the long term care field.
According to the Pioneer Network, food and dining are an integral part of individualized care and self-directed living for several reasons, including the complexity of food and dining requirements when advancing models of culture change, the importance of food and dining as a significant element of daily living, and because the most frequent questions and concerns CMS receives from regulators and providers consistently focus on dining and food policies in nursing homes.
“Therefore, we believe this area is one most in need of national dialogue if we are to improve quality of life for persons living in nursing homes while maintaining safety and quality of care,” the group said.
The recommendations were acted on in conjunction with funding from the Rothschild Foundation to the Pioneer Network in 2011, which allowed formation of the organization’s Food and Dining Clinical Standards Task Force. The task force is comprised of symposium experts, representatives from CMS’ Division of Nursing Homes, FDA, and CDC as well as national standard setting groups.
Download the new standards HERE.
Recreating a Simple Pleasure
The Nursing Office decided to recreate a simple pleasure for Marieta Yalon, who lives in the Lanai Neighborhood. She identified one of her pleasures in life to be making a favorite Filipino dessert called Tambo Tambo. In this picture, Nana Yalon teaches Mona Ordono, UR Assistant, and Chris Casio, Nursing Supervisor, how to make the dessert.
October 18, 2011
Unique Reisdent Room Sparks Conversation
Annie Quitan used to love to travel, so the Lanai Day Shift team decorated her window to reflect that. Now others see the pictures and stop to ask her about her travels. Annie and her son, Vic say they are really happy with the display.
Hale Makua Wailuku Starts New Luana Project
At Hale Makua Wailuku, teams selected one of three Luana projects to implement. The projects are based on Eden principles and philosophies, and come from the Seed Packets book.
- One option was to create a spontaneous moment in the life of a resident, because boredom occurs when our lives lack variety and spontaneity.
- A second choice was to make a change in the resident’s room to make it unique to him or her, because humans weren’t meant to live in a cold, sterile environment.
- The third project was to recreate a simple pleasure from the resident’s life before Hale Makua, because the opportunity to do things we find meaningful is essential to human health.
October 4, 2011
George Rides in Style to the Maui Fair
One of our dedicated volunteers, Ron Rawson, approached Activities Director Teresa Lopes after he found out that resident George Ishii would be his partner at the fair. He said he would love to drive George to the fair in his sports car with the roof down. Teresa knew that George would get a kick out of that. The only glitch was that Ron could not fit Georges wheel chair into his car. Maintenance & Engineering Director Mark Souza graciously said he would follow Ron and George to the Fair with the wheelchair in a Hale Makua truck. George had a blast with the wind blowing through his hair!
October 3, 2011
Barbara Visits Her Home Garden
Above are pictures of Barbara Silva in her yard in Makawao. Barbara came to Hale Makua in November 2010, one day she was telling our Activities Director Teresa Lopes about the day she fell in her living room at home and was taken to MMMC and then to Hale Makua. She shared that since that day she has never gone home and more then anything she would love to just go to Makawao and be able to see her home. Well her wish came true Activities Assistant Jade and Teresa escorted her to her home. That day Barbara brought back four rose plants to put in the Pikake neighborhood garden that she tends to.
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