After four years of researching for her new book, Old
Age in a New Age: The Promise of Transformative Nursing Homes, freelance
writer Beth Baker is hopeful but impatient.
Hopeful, because she's learned nursing homes can become real homes that provide a
life worth living for frail elders.
Impatient, because of the slow-to-change majority of long-term care providers
entrenched in the old institutional model.
"I get impatient when people who I feel should know better are not embracing
culture change wholeheartedly," she says in an interview with Action Pact.
Though acknowledging the practical difficulties of deep change, the real
impediments, says Baker, are cynicism about the abilities of elders and their
caregivers, and lack of imagination about "how it could be."
"I can't tell you how many times I've heard, 'That might work for assisted living
but not in a nursing home because [the elders] are too far gone,' and, 'Aides at our
home couldn't possibly do that,'" she tells Action Pact.
Her book adeptly dispels these myths, citing both anecdotal successes and the
latest scholarly research.
Baker, a former dialysis technician and a regular contributor to the Washington
Post Health Section and the AARP Bulletin, visited more than 20 nursing homes across
the country and interviewed countless residents, caregivers, administrators,
advocates and gerontological experts.
As an outside observer, she confirms what culture change enthusiasts within the
industry have said all along: most conventional nursing homes are unhealthy for
residents and caregivers alike.
"If I had to go into a traditional nursing home, I would be devastated," Baker
tells Action Pact. "The loss of autonomy, privacy and control; the feeling of being
marginalized or warehoused... would devastate anybody."
Her urgency for change is motivated in part by her grandmother, "an extremely
fun-loving, lively person," who quickly "lost her spark" after moving into a "good"
nursing home some 25 years ago. More recently, her mother was temporarily admitted
to a nursing facility to recover from a fall. Ironically, her daughter's book had
just rolled off the presses.
"She was in bed reading my book, saying, 'Oh this is exactly as you describe it,'"
recalls Baker.