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Almost Home

Communication
by joe angelelli
Posted on Thu Jul 21, 2005 at 08:14:05 PM EST

I was extremely pleased to receive the July newsletter from the Almost Home documentary film project.  The Pioneer Network is one of 10 national organizations (so far!) partnering with the Almost Home project to promote the film and organize community screenings and outreach events.

Almost Home rescues from an exile of denial the real stories of aging that lie in the vast middle between the uber-heroic octogenarian marathoner and the feeble geriatric that most Americans fear becoming. A feature length, cinema-verité film shot on location in a continuing care community that boasts a nursing home transforming its medical (think hospital) model of care into a holistic one (think home), Almost Home is a stunningly intimate film that combines the institution's struggle to shake the nursing home stigma with tender, sometimes difficult, stories of people who live, work and visit there. The film follows one couple bonded by Alzheimer's and another divided by Parkinson's; children torn between caring for their parents and caring for their children; nursing assistants doing unsavory work for poverty wages while juggling precarious lives at home; healthy elders fearful of moving to the dreaded nursing home; and a visionary nursing home director trying to transform a century-old hospital-like institution into a true home. It all adds up to a dramatic and surprising story about aging where that grips you from the start, never flinches from reality -- good and bad -- and offers hope where you might have thought there was none.

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Bob Haig, an elder from Almost Home

The Pioneer Exchange (a collaborative media site!) could be a very effective place for individuals to organize their communities around the film.  The Almost Home project staff has compiled an excellent guide to planning an event.

More to come on this very exciting consciousness raising opportunity after I correspond with the film's director, co-producer and outreach director Brad Lichtenstein and the film's outreach coordinator Lauren Burke...click on "comments" below to take the poll and leave a comment (please).

< Open Thread for the Pioneer Institute | Letter from CMS Survey & Certification Group >

Poll

The best venue for an Almost Home screening would be...
...a group of PBS friends who will donate to their local stations afterwards
...a community center packed with 100 folks, half elders, half students
...a church basement full of parishioners of all ages
...an art house theater filled with hipsters who draw images of their future selves as elders afterwards

Votes: 97
Results | Other Polls



Almost Home (4.00 / 1)

Hi there,

I'm the guy who directed Almost Home.  If I do say so myself, I don't think that there's anything like it out there.  I depicts the real struggle of trying to do culture change as well as the life of elders, staff and families.  People grow closer by dealing with dementia while others split apart.  There's even an affair, so you might say the film has some spicy moments.  But most of all, the film is a good story that can spark lots of discussion in your communities.  And we are providing it for free during the outreach campaign, which will continue until the broadcast in January.  So join us by showing Almost Home in your community.

-Brad


by heards on Fri Jul 22, 2005 at 09:05:46 AM EST
Almost Home (4.00 / 1)

Hi Brad,
Joanne Rader and I showed a very short film clip from Almost Home at our last Pioneer Institute in Oregon.  We used the film clip to introduce the two day training which was designed to help providers implement culture change.  The film clip we used included the nursing home administrator, a family member who had his own opinion of what his wife needed (which of course differed from what his wife seemed to be wanting!)and a nurse who wanted to keep using her medication cart in spite of the facility's desire to eradicate that institutional artifact.  This short clip showed a genuine slice of reality that opened great conversation--both about the opportunities and the challenges of deep change in nursing homes.

Now that I have seen even this short piece of the film, I am eager to use it in other settings as well.  Thanks to all who are involved in creating this, and I hope many people sign up to hold community showings of the film.  


by Sue Misiorski on Sun Jul 24, 2005 at 06:25:59 PM EST
[ Parent ]
coalition work (none / 0)

Here's just some of what the coalitions are already doing:

AUSTIN, TX
KLRU & Area Agency on Aging of
the Capital Area
Station contact: Karen Quebe
kquebe "at" klru.org

*Who: 15-20 nursing home administrators plus area culture change experts
*What: Breakfast or Luncheon meeting to see excerpts from Almost Home that stimulate dialogue related to culture change in nursing homes
*When: 3-6 weeks prior to broadcast date
*How: Group of area aging experts convene to frame the content, develop the invitation list, and identify informal networks through which the film can be promoted
*Almost Home grant matched by community partner

BOZEMAN, MT
MT-PBS & Life's End Institute
Station contact:
Christin Seifert
Chris_seifert "at" montanapbs.org

*Reach unidentified caregivers via screenings and community planning
at AARP & MT Extension sites
*Show film to nursing home/retirement home directors from various counties and discuss how they can begin to implement appropriate changes in their facility

COLUMBIA, SC
SC-TV & The South Carolina
Department of Health and Human Services
Station contact: Carolyn Holderman
hold "at" scetv.org

*Use Almost Home film clips and web materials to promote discussion at a variety of professional health association meetings targeting nursing homes and assisted living industry
*Incorporate Almost Home into Carolina Medical Review culture change presentation for nursing homes
*Promote Almost Home in SCENE magazine, website on TV along with providing a phone bank in conjunction with broadcast
*Possibly devote a town hall series to aging

GAINESVILLE, FL
WUFT
Station contact: Susan White
swhite "at" wuft.org

*Air an already produced episode of their local program "Law Matters" on the topic of Advance Directives, hosted by an attorney
*Workshops on completing an advance directive using already created kits
*Use website to highlight program and outreach elements
*Host a 1/2 hour call-in follow-up program

RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, NC
UNC-TV & The North Carolina
Division of Aging and Adult
Services - Long Term Care
Ombudsman Program
Station contact: Mary Cay Corr
mcorr "at" unctv.org

*Feature story in monthly program guide, CENTERPIECE and mention in the E-Newsletter
*Newsmaker from the Nursing Home Community on "NC Now", UNC-TV's week-nightly news program
*Point to Almost Home web page in "Health Wise" section on the UNC-TV web page, webpage of the NC Division of the Aging and Adult Services, and webpage of the Secretary of the State of N.C
*Process ideas for screening with help from senior citizen agencies
*Workshops to describe culture change in the industry using segments from Almost Home


by joe angelelli on Wed Jul 27, 2005 at 09:05:19 AM EST
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