Dr. Bill Thomas, a Harvard trained physician, wants you to know one very
important thing about life and aging: “growing older is a good thing.”
He’s been in the news quite a bit regarding his somewhat radical, yet very positive, first-hand perspective of aging. A Washington Post article featured
this one man crusade to change negative attitudes about aging and help
people to think of “post-adulthood” as a time of enrichment:
“Thomas believes that Americans have bought so willingly into the
idea of aging as something to be feared that it has become a
self-fulfilling prophecy leading to isolation, loneliness and lack of
autonomy,” the article stated. In 1991, Thomas became the medical
director of a nursing home in upstate New York. He found the place, as
the Post put it, “depressing, a repository for old people whose minds
and bodies seemed dull and dispirited.”
In 1991, Dr. Thomas found himself the medical director of a nursing
home in upstate New York and in the words of the Washington Post
article, he felt the place a: “depressing, a repository for old people whose minds and bodies seemed dull and dispirited.”
So, what did Thomas do to change the resident’s lives forever and spark a movement in aging? The Washington Post explains: “[Dr.
Thomas] decided to transform the nursing home. Based on a hunch, he
persuaded his staff to stock the facility with two dogs, four cats,
several hens and rabbits, and 100 parakeets, along with hundreds of
plants, a vegetable and flower garden, and a day-care site for staffers’
kids.
“All those animals in a nursing home broke state law, but for
Thomas and his staff, it was a revelation. Caring for the plants and
animals restored residents’ spirits and autonomy; many started dressing
themselves, leaving their rooms and eating again. The number of
prescriptions fell to half of that of a control nursing home,
particularly for drugs that treat agitation. Medication costs plummeted,
and so did the death rate.”
“He named the approach the Eden Alternative — based on the idea
that a nursing home should be less like a hospital and more like a
garden — and it was replicated in hundreds of institutions in Canada,
Europe, Japan and Australia as well as in all 50 U.S. states (the animal
restriction in New York was voted down).”
Thomas has also pioneered small, intimate residences that he calls
Green Houses, where residents have their own bedrooms and bathrooms.
The result:“Within six weeks, they had to send a truck around to
pick up all the wheelchairs,” Thomas told the Post. “You know why most
people [in nursing homes] use wheelchairs? Because the buildings are so
damn big.”
So take heart, here’s living proof that age is truly just a number!
And, that what we need most is loving contact throughout our lives,
whether from people or animals and our minds and spirit play a large
role in our happiness and longevity.
Full Article & Source:
The Harvard Doctor Changing Nursing Homes Forever
He will change his mind when he gets older and finds his mind and body don't work like they have all his life.
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