Monday, January 23, 2017

Transitional Care Center at Lutheran Living: Progressive Short-Term Rehabilitation

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The new Transitional Care Center at Lutheran Living is working to bridge the gap between hospital and home. Our state-of-the-art facility will provide you with the care you need on your transition back home after a hospitalization. There are so many things to love about our new facility, from the excellent staff to the comfortable, hotel-like rooms. Let us tell you more about the care you can expect from Lutheran Living's Transitional Care Center.

The Goals of Lutheran Living
The goal of the Transitional Care Center is to rehabilitate you so you can get back home and back to the life you had before you were hospitalized. We offer many therapies to expedite reinstating your health: physical, occupational, speech, respiratory, nutrition counseling, and HUR rehabilitation equipment. Through these methods, we reduce emergency department visits and rehospitalizations, promoting better health and peace of mind.

Therapeutic Options
Besides our progressive therapy techniques, we also provide a knowledgeable and understanding staff. The team includes registered and licensed nurses, certified nursing assistants, medical directors, social workers, dieticians, therapy specialists, and chaplains. We specialize in many different areas of rehabilitation, including cardiac, orthopedic, and neurological issues. For a more comprehensive list, visit our website. We are well equipped to help you.

Accommodations
At the Transitional Care Center, we also have luxurious rooms that will make you feel completely at home during your stay. More like a hotel than a nursing home, your private room is complete with furnishings, a refrigerator, cable TV, a phone, and internet access. You will be served three meals a day in the dining room and have the opportunity to make new friends with the other residents. We strive to provide a positive and enjoyable environment for everyone who stays with us.

After a major surgery or lengthy hospitalization, you might not feel back to your old self quite as quickly as you hope. Think of the Transitional Care Center as a place that has everything needed to get you back up on your feet. Your plan for care (and, ultimately, discharge) starts the day you come to us. We want to see you transition from the hospital to a healthy state of mind, body, and being so you can return home.

If you are curious to know more, we strongly encourage you to view our testimonial videos of others who have enjoyed their time at Lutheran Living's Transitional Care Center.  

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Spreading the Christmas Spirit to Seniors

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The Christmas season is a joyous time of the year where people spend time with the ones they love. For seniors, sometimes their loved ones have passed away or they don’t get to spend as much time as they would like with their busy families. There are certain ways you can help make the holiday season a more festive one for seniors living on their own.


Spend Time with Them
For one, find the time to spend with them. Showing that you care by visiting them during Christmas goes a long way. Spending a day with them, taking them out to eat or taking them shopping will certainly brighten their spirits. Having them stay overnight, if able, can mean a lot to them. If you’re not able to spend time with them on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, go to their residence before the holidays.
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Play a Game or Do an Activity Together
When you visit, bring some activities with you. Playing cards or a board game can be two great activities while you spend time together. Take interest in some of their interests. Have you ever wanted to learn how to sew? Or maybe you still can’t quite master the perfect way to tie a fishing hook. The senior in your life would likely love to teach you.


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Getting The Perfect Gift
Everybody knows when you give a gift to someone, it shows how much you care about them. However, getting a unique gift for a senior can be important. If there are important pictures in an album that your senior has, putting them into frames to preserve their memories can be a great gift. Anything you can find around their room to help preserve a memory as a gift can be meaningful to them.


Maybe the best thing you can do for the senior you love is to bring them to church. Connecting with your loved one in a church setting during Christmas can mean a lot to you and them.


At Lutheran Living, we provide compassionate care and services in order to address the individual healthcare needs of the resident community. We encourage families to spend as much time with their loved ones who live at our campus as they can during Christmas.


Lutheran Living wishes everyone a blessed holiday season.

Monday, November 14, 2016

Compassionate Care and Service: A History of Lutheran Living

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With a vibrant and rich history in service and compassionate giving, Lutheran Living Senior Campus has evolved from a small coalition of neighbors caring for one another to expansive senior living facilities serving Muscatine, Iowa. In order to see the evolution of care, let us learn more about the history of Lutheran Living:

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The Early Days of Lutheran Living
After immigrating to America, German-born Henry Reinemund was originally ordained at a Lutheran Ministry in Davenport. He resigned from Zion Lutheran Church in Muscatine and began caring for orphaned children and the elderly in 1895. Alongside his wife, Sophia Weltz, and their eight children, Pastor Reinemund began running a facility to help those in need. The Reinemund family would lead the facilities for 23 years.

In search of a bigger facility, the Reinemund family got in touch with the Hershey family. Multimillionaire Benjamin Hershey, known as the ‘Lumber King,’ owned the land on which Lutheran Homes is now located. Hershey was one of the first men in America to ship blooded cattle from Europe to his farm and creamery.

After his death, Hershey’s wife, Elizabeth, and daughter, Myra, donated their summer home and five acres of land to the Reinemund family. After extensive renovations, the new facilities included a school, kitchen, dining hall, and rooms for orphaned children and elderly residents. The facility would later accommodate a chapel that welcomed worship, baptisms, confirmations, marriage vows, and more. The Reinemund family would come to run the facility–affectionately named Lutheran’s Orphans and Old Folks Home–for over 23 years.
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In 1921, a new school was built behind the Hershey home to accommodate growing minds. Desiring continuing education for orphaned children, classes were held in the basement of the orphanage until 1922.

Under New Ownership
After the death of Pastor Reinemund and his wife, leadership fell to Reverend Charles L. Ramme in 1918. In his first year, Reverend Ramme saw the end of World War 1 and initiated the ringing of the Hershey Home bell tower after it had been left silent for many years. After a plight of influenza endangered the Ramme family in 1919, Reverend Klein and his family took over leadership in 1921 and remained there for 20 years.

Reverend Elmer Nicholsen took up the post at the end of 1941 and served the children and elderly, resigning because of the difficult times brought on by WWII. He returned to the parish ministry in Hammond Indiana. Reverend Lawrence Stumme was them called to the position. As the orphaned children grew into young adults, the care services and education program evolved into many phases before being phased out by the mid-1960s. The focus of the home switched primarily to elderly care, a community in which Lutheran Home still compassionately serves.
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Lutheran Living Today
Today, the mission of Lutheran Living Senior Campus is to provide compassionate care and services in order to address the individual healthcare needs of the resident community. Our full-time chaplain leads the support of Christian worship in the Faith Chapel with weekly Bible study, daily devotionals, memorial services, monthly Catholic Mass, weekly communion services, pastoral visits to those hospitalized and much more.

While Lutheran Living has evolved in form and leadership, the mission of providing compassionate spiritual care has remained the utmost priority. To learn more about our modern services, visit Lutheran Living today.  


Wednesday, September 14, 2016

The Benefits of Working in the Healthcare Industry


Are you looking to explore a career that will deliver fantastic opportunities and personal fulfillment? A career in the health industry can deliver that and so much more.
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With over 13 million jobs in the continually-growing healthcare industry, there will be a variety of job opportunities available to you. With advances in medicine, new health reform legislation, a rapidly expanding population, and longer life expectancies, healthcare professional will find no shortage of interesting opportunities. With a career in the healthcare industry, you will benefit from better job security and stability.
Ensure Job Satisfaction
There are numerous opportunities for high earning potential, upward mobility, great working conditions, employee benefits, and specialization around every corner. You will never find yourself stuck in a position or unable to relocate, work your way up, or try something new in the healthcare field.

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Gain Fulfillment from Helping Others
In the healthcare industry, you have the opportunity to impact patients’ lives in a meaningful and important ways. From helping to bring new life into the world, treating painful and debilitating illnesses and conditions, easing the pain of a terminal illness, and so much more, you have the power to better the lives of individuals, families, and communities—what could be more fulfilling?

Explore Opportunities for all Experiences and Backgrounds.
With such a diverse array of health industry options, there are interesting options at every corner, whether you have a Ph.D. or a high school diploma. With a variety of educational levels and life experience, every individual can bring a wide breadth of knowledge to the table.
Experience Exciting Work
Don’t enjoy sitting at a desk all day, staring at a computer or talking on a phone? The nature of a health industry career can be exciting, adrenaline-inducing, fast-paced, and consistently different. With new patients and new medical innovations occurring daily, there’s never a dull moment.

If you are looking for a new, fulfilling career, look no further than the healthcare industry. For more information on the careers available at Lutheran Living Senior Campus, visit our employment page You can also visit our Volunteer page to learn more about opportunities to connect with Lutheran Living residents.

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Why Seniors Prefer Living in Care Centers

For many seniors and their families, the decision of choosing between healthcare facilities and remaining at home can be a difficult one. Assisted living facilities, however, offer plenty of opportunity and more freedom for seniors than ever before. Read on for more information on the benefits of living in senior care centers:


Better Social Opportunities
For seniors who live on their own, it can be lonely and isolating. Assisted living facilities offer ample opportunities for seniors to socialize with peers, meet new friends, and develop new relationships. With opportunities including socials, field trips, and organized activities, there is sure to be no shortage of exciting and stimulating events to enjoy.


Concentration on Physical Activity and Health
Assisted living facilities and care centers offer opportunities for physical fitness and activity that may be more difficult to come by at home. Many care centers offer gyms, fitness equipment, and personal trainers, and even more living facilities offer group exercise classes like Tai Chi, Zumba, and aerobics to fit in both physical activity and social time.


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A Focus on Nutrition
Seniors can benefit from living in a care center with well-trained nurses and nutritionists who can help keep a focus on nutrition and health. For seniors who don’t know or unable to cook for themselves, supervised nutrition can help provide a healthy and nutritious regular diet for the changing needs of a senior.

Household Duties are Completed
The day-to-day responsibilities that can fall to the wayside or to family caregivers are all taken care of at senior living facilities. The majority of these typical household duties—housekeeping, garden tending, social and health appointments, transportation—are taken care of by the senior living facilities. This can lift a great burden from the senior and the senior’s loved ones.
With assisted living facilities, the greatest benefit is the independence that seniors can regain. Assisted living centers encourage seniors to seek new opportunities, discover a higher quality of life, and give seniors the tools to care for themselves. For more information on assisted living facilities, visit Lutheran Living.

Thursday, July 7, 2016

Hobbies for Assisted Living

Seeking out activities that enrich each day can make those in assisted living lead a meaningful life. Exploring new hobbies can spark new interests, help those in assisted living develop new social connections, and lead to better mental, emotional, and physical health. Take a glance at some new hobbies to explore below:

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Tend to a Garden

Gardening at any age is healthy and therapeutic, and there is a real sense of accomplishment that comes with nurturing a garden full of vegetables, flowers, or herbs. Gardening can also encourage relaxation, positivity, and motor skills.

Play Games

Brain games like crossword puzzles, brain teasers, and Sudoku are stimulating and encourages the brain to focus and forge connections. Participate in other stimulating hobbies like book clubs, journaling, writing workshops, and discussion groups.

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Make Homemade Goods

To exercise muscle mobility, take up sewing, needlepoint, knitting, or crocheting. Create items for friends and family. Donate homemade goods to hospitals, animal shelters, or churches, or sell them on Etsy or at local flea markets, and craft shows.

Participate in Arts and Crafts

Art is all about self-expression. Help the senior in your life rediscover their creative interests or discover new ones like painting, scrapbooking, and more.


Engage in Low-impact Aerobic Exercises

Exercising can improve vitality, endurance, strength, flexibility, circulation, and reduce the risk of many diseases for anyone. Depending on ability, participate in swimming, golf, yoga, meditation, and simple stretches. Many sports and exercises can be easily adapted dependent on ability and interest.

Socialize

Socializing has been shown to decrease the risk of depression and high blood pressure, and socializing strengthens relationships and improves mental and emotional health. Engage in games and regular conversations and social hours with friends and family. Participating in group classes like dance workshops is an excellent activity for socializing and exercising. It improves balance, mobility, and flexibility. And it’s fun!

There are many hobbies that those in assisted living can take up and enjoy. From enjoying old hobbies to developing new ones, engaging with new interests will help seniors increase connections and improve their quality of life. For more information on addressing the health care needs of the senior in your life, visit Lutheran Living.

Friday, April 22, 2016

The Importance of Staying Socially Connected In Your Golden Years

As you get older and retire and/or move to a new community, it is important to stay as socially connected as you were in your younger days. Since you are not heading to an office or getting out of the house as often, you could be missing out on important social interactions that can help you to stay healthy. Staying socially active and maintaining interpersonal relationships can encourage you to maintain good physical and emotional health and cognitive function. Below a few good examples of the benefits of staying socially connected in your golden years.

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Reduce Mental Health Risks. Communicating regularly with your peers helps prevent mental health issues such as low cognitive function and depression. When you stay socially connected, your brain is stays engaged, your mind stays sharp, and the risk of memory loss is reduced. It also is a great way to reduce stress levels in day-to-day life. The interactions produce a sense of belonging, which prevents feelings of isolation that could cause depression.

Provide A Support System. When you communicate with individuals who are going through a similar situation as you, you’ll find it is easier to go through it together than alone. When you have a support system, you are able to have more information and thoughtful conversations by engaging with different individuals in the community.
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Maintain Physical Activity. The great thing about staying socially connected as you get older is that most social things you do with your peers require physical activity. Getting out of the house more often will improve your immune system and nutrition levels. A few examples of ways to stay socially active as you get older include:

- Join a gym. Not only does physical activity keep your body healthy but it also allows you to stay socially active. There are a variety of gyms and organizations you can join. Silver Sneakers, for example, is an exercise program for active older adults.

- Volunteer in your community. A more meaningful way to stay socially active would be to volunteer in your community. For example, you can volunteer at a local food shelf. Many churches have a local food shelf helping out less fortunate families in the community. If you love animals, volunteering at a humane society would not only benefit the animals but also your disposition.

- Go to church. If you were active in your church and found it meaningful before, continuing that experience - even if it’s in a new place of worship - is vital. Church can provide you with a place to make new friends, gather for social events and expand on your personal and spiritual growth. Keeping that connection to your faith can help with your happiness and overall well-being. If you haven’t been active in your church, you may find that it is a good way to meet new people and become active within the church community. It can give you a sense of direction, purpose, and accountability - that you are important and needed.

Staying young at heart and in your mind, body and soul is a goal everyone (even the young) should strive toward. Just because you are older doesn’t mean you can’t do most everything you’ve done in the past. Staying active, volunteering, worshipping, and socializing are more important now than ever to keep living a fulfilled life - the life you deserve!