Rethinking Senior Living | Steve Shields | TEDxMHK

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • When did we, as a society, get so disconnected from each other? Steve saw this as a problem in senior living communities. He passionately developed a multi-generational health and wellness neighborhood, as a new concept, to change the future of senior living.
    Steve is an international thought and action leader in the creation of innovative models in intergenerational living. He is a sought-after keynote speaker and workshop presenter on leadership and transformation in multigenerational living and hospital care. He was formerly the President and CEO of Meadowlark Hills Retirement Community in Manhattan, KS, an internationally known senior living provider that, under Steve’s leadership, pioneered and shaped the “Household Model” in the 1990s - bringing heart into the home. Along with LaVrene Norton, Steve co-authored the book, “In Pursuit of the Sunbeam: a Practical Guide to Transformation from Institution to Household,” which is currently in its sixth printing and has sold in all 50 states and a number of foreign countries. He also co-authored “The Household Model Business Case,” a definitive work establishing viability of this model in long-term care. Steve also taught leadership in long-term care for 17 years at Kansas State University.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx

Комментарии • 22

  • @napriaa5175
    @napriaa5175 3 года назад +6

    This is amazing and we DO need more of this. I am a bit concerned about how available it will be for EVERYONE though.

  • @spencerbrown6214
    @spencerbrown6214 4 года назад +10

    I like the idea of a household model for seniors. I work at a retirement community and all of us are overloaded with state mandated regulatory paperwork and reports instead being able to spend more time enjoying our residents. 🙃

  • @gladyss.609
    @gladyss.609 2 года назад +4

    This will certainly cost more than the avetage senior can afford at this time in our society.

  • @gladyss.609
    @gladyss.609 2 года назад +3

    Our society is not yet willing to decrease the war budget to increase the health budget.

  • @mojojeinxs9960
    @mojojeinxs9960 Год назад +5

    There comes a point geriatric residents need skilled care and need to be in a medical setting. Funerals are for the living assistant living appeals to the families. Nice day decor to take away guilt. I seen residents that were so far advanced with dementia that should have been sent to skill nursing suffering in memory care because that type of facility is not equipped to handle somebody that needs skill care. In a private pay facility they will keep you as long as your money doesn't run out.

  • @FrankFurgiuele
    @FrankFurgiuele Год назад

    GREAT VISION...

  • @Skipbo000
    @Skipbo000 Год назад +3

    No no no. The responsibility falls on the family. We would be outraged if a mother took her baby to a facility and said, "here you take care of it." They raise us from birth for 18 YEARS and the minute they need help we move them out of their home and pay strangers to take care of them. HORRIBLE!

  • @spencerbrown6214
    @spencerbrown6214 4 года назад +5

    Please open something like this in San Jose, Ca, I would love to work there. 🙏🌎

  • @mystorymysong777
    @mystorymysong777 2 месяца назад

    Senior living is right up there with big pharma. If they really wanted the industry to chsnge it would. Most larger communities are owned by money hungry families with heart warming stories about how much they care without services or practices that reflect it. Senior Living has turned into a big real estste flip and a legal way to rob seniors. There are many over worked under paid employees who actually do what they do because they love the residents - unfortunately they leave the industry because they are treated just as poorly as the residents. These types of models sound impressive but they still equate to overworked under paid frontline staff.

  • @chortvozmite141
    @chortvozmite141 3 года назад +3

    Sounds like an ad.

  • @markd5067
    @markd5067 4 года назад

    The costs are comparable to other assisted living homes....

  • @seattlecathy
    @seattlecathy 2 года назад +3

    This is not a solution. These models don't scale and are cost-prohibitive. Not everyone has a family - let alone a loving, caring family that has the capability to provide oversight. Ultimately we need more access to assisted dying. Once you get to the point where you need assistance with daily activities, you're in a prison of your own body and probably subject to abuse from your caregivers.

    • @Skipbo000
      @Skipbo000 Год назад

      exactly that's why the family has to step in and do the work themselves instead of shipping them off to strangers.

    • @mvann5
      @mvann5 Год назад

      But what if you have no family?

    • @katme8055
      @katme8055 Год назад

      I choose to die at 65 with dignity

    • @mvann5
      @mvann5 Год назад

      @@katme8055 Uh, if only there were a way to do this easily...

  • @texann1319
    @texann1319 3 года назад

    This was tried in Houston...cost of implementation of was too much for the "powers that be."

  • @patriciaoffer9585
    @patriciaoffer9585 3 года назад +1

    To those who enjoy reading heavy comments:
    An elderly neighbor/his son might've read something I'd written to one of them in which I'd possibly implied that I'd, 'revolutionize the care industry.'
    I must follow through, it seems, whichever path the neighbor chooses.
    At least one respectable commune could be involved in the revolution.
    And any community built for elders/others could coexist peacefully with the First Nations.
    Marie Antoinettes will regard the below as crazy:
    Even anonymous reporting or APS *may* prove out of the question.
    There's a gang in the neighborhood, and they may be manipulating the elderly neighbor.
    And/or he's cooperating with them.
    Someday I may know how (un)willingly he may be involved.
    Allegedly he's been far from an angel in his lifetime. And/or people change.
    One night he bellowed from his balcony:
    'Will you PLEASE help me get OUT of this??!!!'
    Maybe he was shouting about the cold. Either way, it's a mess.
    He's diminutive, Italian-American, and he walked/walks his dog at least once daily.

  • @mvann5
    @mvann5 Год назад

    He set this up in Kansas?

  • @jacquelineioliphdrn5282
    @jacquelineioliphdrn5282 Год назад +1

    This is a lot of fluff without substance. No substantive content to learn from. Nothing. This is the first negative review I left on RUclips. The first few minutes were meaningless fluff and the subsequent discussion was rambling by an unprepared and uniquely inarticulate man. Don't waste your time.

  • @jagmaster6595
    @jagmaster6595 7 лет назад +1

    First