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The Chronicle of Philanthropy
News Updates

June 24, 2008

Foundation Supports New Elder-Care Effort

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, in Princeton, N.J., is investing $15-million over five years to support Bill Thomas’s vision of “Green Houses,” the 48-year-old physician’s effort to replace large nursing homes with small, homelike facilities for 10 to 12 elderly residents, The Wall Street Journal reports.

Forty-one Green Houses are up and running in 10 states, and foundation officials say they hope the houses will eventually be built in all 50 states.

The foundation’s support of the houses represents the most ambitious challenge to date to the nation’s system of 16,000 nursing homes. To supporters, Green Houses could sweep aside what many see as the degrading life the elderly can experience at large institutions.

But Susan Feeney, a spokeswoman for the American Health Care Association, which represents thousands of for-profit and nonprofit nursing homes, says many of those institutions are moving toward creating a more homelike feel. “While it may not be scrapping a large building … we are changing,” she says.

The Green Houses also face many impediments, including elder-care regulations and the high costs of building the houses. Experts also say the concept faces resistance from many parts of the existing nursing-home system. However, an independent study found that residents in the Green Houses might be safer and healthier. The study found that Green House residents fell less often and sustained fewer injuries than residents in traditional nursing-home settings, reported The Chronicle of Philanthropy.

Foundation officials say they don’t know whether Green Houses would be an economically sound model for providing elder care, but they’ve decided to invest in the effort anyway. The foundation — which holds $10-billion in assets — is directing the cash to NCB Capital Impact, a Washington nonprofit group that has been offering architectural, consulting, education, and other help to any party interested in operating a Green House.

Comments

  1. one question… Are the green houses going to be a replica of the care afforded the mentally impaired?

    — doris scott    Jun 25, 12:40 AM    #

  2. I wonder how much it will cost potential residents (due to them being more expensive to build and maintain), and whether these houses will accept Medicaid…

    — Lisa Dalrymple    Jun 25, 06:59 PM    #

  3. Answers:
    1) Please define what you mean by care afforded the mentally impaired — under what circumstances?
    2) Green Houses accept Medicaid and cost the residents no more than the average nursing home.

    Please feel free to ask me questions directly on my blog at www.changingaging.org.

    Best,
    Dr. Bill Thomas

    — Dr. Bill Thomas    Jul 2, 10:15 AM    #

  4. Dr. Thomas,
    Often, as in my mother’s case, the elderly have daily requirements that stress the nursing care, due to the ratio between residents and caregivers. Does the plan for these houses provide for more staff to handle these needs or will the ratios remain the same?

    — Marilyn Watkins    Jul 16, 01:40 PM    #

Commenting is closed for this article.




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