This confusion (or use
of “alternative facts”?) is understandable as ALFs admit frail older people
with complex medical conditions – a trend that was reported more
than a decade ago. With ALF residents appearing more like nursing home residents, some ALFs have “medicalized”
their original hospitality/social model with the addition of nurses on staff or
on call, and
requiring residents with “higher needs” to hire their own private caregivers.
During my stint in an
ALF, staff carried walkie talkies mostly to report falls, biohazards or other
emergencies to “Health Services” staffed by certified nurse assistants (CNA). (City
College of San Francisco offers CNA training that can be completed in one
semester, and free to City residents.)
I also carried a sheet that
listed residents and their room numbers so I could report, “STAT, (location of
incident), (room # to identify unnamed resident) needs assistance,” then wait
for a CNA to “copy” and show up at the requested location. Since ALFs generally do not employ nurses or
other health care professionals, ALF staff must call 911 and wait for an
ambulance or paramedics to arrive.
Tranquil community space in Congregation L’Dor VaDor at San Francisco Campus for Jewish
Living (SFCJL, formerly Hebrew Home for Aged Disabled dba Jewish Home, until name
changed in 2017). While
welcoming to all, the facility’s Jewish identity remains intact—unlike other
non-profit senior living facilities that were renamed to remove their religious
affiliation: American Baptist Homes of the West renamed HumanGood (2017), Episcopal Senior Communities renamed Covia (2018), and Northern
California Presbyterian Homes and Services renamed Sequoia Living (2019).
Because a nursing
home’s medical model tends to reinforce the culture of chronicity, philosopher Harry Moody
suggested the practice of conscious aging (belief in “higher order of meaning
or spiritual growth”) to accept physical decline and
adapt by recognizing the primacy of spiritual virtues that endure. SFCJL Rabbi Sheldon Marder always said the
right words at the right time, providing reassurance (especially after the
Tree of Life and Poway synagogue shootings) and spiritual support, and
encouraging contemplation during his weekly Jewish Art and Literature class.
In a nursing home, I
felt greater peace of mind and safety for residents because I could easily find
nursing staff to request assistance and use actual names of residents (who were
not just a room number) while respecting privacy, so walkie talkies were not
used; the level of care was what you would expect from a medical model, so I
found better management of residents’ more complex health conditions that could
be addressed by an in-house interdisciplinary team (including registered
nurses, CNAs, geriatricians, geriatric psychiatrists, psychiatric physician
assistant, social workers, etc.). In
fact, I was happy to see several former ALF residents receiving skilled nursing
care during their rehab stay following hospital discharge.
According
to the National Center for Health Statistics on Long-Term Care Services in the United States (2013), average nursing hours per resident day (hprd)
were 3.83, and average social work hprd were 0.08 (or 4.8 minutes). To facilitate more person-centered care, it
would be worthwhile to consider increasing social services staffing
requirements because current federal regulation, 42 CFR §483.15(g), under
Nursing Home Reform Act (OBRA 1987), provides for one full-time social worker
for a nursing home with more than 120 beds. Social work intervention can help residents cultivate meaningful relationships to create a more home-like environment where they feel supported and a sense of belonging. To further balance the deficit-oriented medical model (treating symptoms v. caring for whole
person), people can document their own comprehensive, strengths-based
biopsychosocial assessment, and offer it to staff upon admission.
Jewish Home’s
former main entrance (photo above taken in 2013) was demolished to make way for
expansion to add assisted living and community center to its
current skilled nursing and rehabilitation center and acute geriatric
psychiatry hospital. Last year, I
returned to Jewish Home (renamed SFCJL) 5 years after I organized a Healthier Living-Chronic
Disease Self-Management Program (CDSMP) workshop series there, thanks to my SFSU gerontology
instructor Dr. C, who was Chief Nursing Officer at the time. Workshop participants included several centenarians, who died since then,
but I was thrilled to see several nonagenarian participants 5 years older and
living quite well with nursing assistance!
As a gerontology student, my focus was home- and community-based services (HCBS), and I never
considered working in long-term care (LTC) facilities.
Yet, the reality is not everyone is able to “age in place” safely in
their homes indefinitely, so I thought it was important as a gerontologist to
gain experience in the continuum of care that includes LTC facilities: 3.1% of
older people age 65+ reside in nursing homes, based on 2010 U.S. Census.
Because death is
prevalent in LTC facilities, some residents wonder when it will be time for
them to go. Listening to the lived experience of residents, who speak with
candor and share their vulnerabilities in the comfort of their home, has been
the most rewarding aspect of working in LTC facilities. Sharing time and space for reflection, coming
to terms with life by reframing challenges is so profound, and these precious
moments could come up at any time. For
example, in response to staff encouraging residents to be as independent as
possible, one resident wrote a humorous short story, The Self-Service Nursing
Home. Residents also taught me subjects
I never studied (architecture, opera, timpani, Yiddish), as well as resilience in adapting to
new realities (losses, getting along with staff and other residents).
Back to community living
Happy 20th
anniversary of June 22, 1999 Olmstead decision, by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, supporting
people with mental disabilities to live in least restrictive settings! After a 2-year hiatus, I am transitioning back to my original focus on health
promotion including doing what I can so people can age at home and in their communities
as they desire, for as long as safely possible.
This return to HCBS means I need to get up-to-date on issues like housing
affordability, public benefits, home-delivered meals, hoarding, domestic
violence, substance use disorders, etc. particularly as systemic inequities
impact the health and ability of older adults to age in community and avoid premature institutionalization.
Housing affordability
Healthy aging begins at home! In Generation Priced Out: Who Gets to Live in the New Urban America (2018), Tenderloin Housing Clinic Director
Randy Shaw blamed baby boomer
homeowners who prevent construction of new housing through exclusionary single
family home zoning, so that this restricted supply drives up home prices and
rents at the expense of YIMBY millennials. Yet this generational conflict dissipates
when older adult (including boomer) homeowners desire to downsize and
transition to smaller units in a duplex or apartment buildings. He also described affluent NIMBY groups who
oppose low-income senior housing, and noted New York City Councilmember
Margaret Chin’s courage to call for all neighborhoods including upscale ones to
participate in alleviating the affordable housing crisis while preserving open
garden space. In contrast, he noted how
self-identified progressive San Francisco Supervisor Norman Yee considered “lack
of community support” in his decision not to support proposed low-income senior
housing in upscale Forest Hill neighborhood.
At Tenants Protecting
Affordable Housing convention, we watched Priced Out: Why You Can’t
Afford a Place to Live in San Francisco (2019), a 6-part animated series available
for viewing online by People Power Media. Sponsored by Tenderloin People’s Congress (TPC), Housing Rights
Committee, Independent Living Resource Center, Senior & Disability Action
(SDA), and Central City SRO Collaborative, this event offered workshops on Code Enforcement Outreach Program, SRO tenant's rights, mediation, eviction process,
affordable housing, SB 529 Tenant’s Right to Organize, and grassroots tenant
organizing.
In its Vision 2020 list of priorities, TPC identified the need to have at
least one or two Pit Stop locations that are staffed and open 24 hours
because sanitation is a human right! Just days after the convention, SF Department of Public Works announced
its 3-month pilot program for a 24-hour Pit Stop in the Tenderloin this summer.
Hooray, accessible toilets will provide relief for all, including clients who are homebound
due to incontinence and people who are homeless.
SDA Housing organizer Tony
Robles presented on “deeply affordable” housing (aka Senior Operating Subsidy =
SOS), as proposed by SF Board of Supervisors President Norman Yee, for seniors
with incomes below 30% of the Area Median Income (AMI), which is $25,850 for a
single person. The median income for a single older adult
(mostly on fixed income) is $1,825 per month. Afterwards, a younger Tenderloin SRO
resident took the stage to talk about her hunger strike for rent relief,
protesting $500 rent representing more than half of her income, so she was
calling for a 30% rental cap on master leases with City’s Department of
Homelessness and Supportive Housing.
At “The Al Robles Express” documentary launch on the 10th
anniversary of Al Robles’ death, Tony participated in panel discussion with Manilatown artists about their journey to the Cordillera region of the Philippines
in honor of his late Uncle Al, poet and defender of the International Hotel
(aka I-Hotel). Though Al never set foot
in the Philippines, his poetry was influenced by the village of his ancestors
and Tony brought his Uncle Al’s ashes to rest there. The documentary showed the resistance of village
people from Cordillera who faced displacement by the proposed Chico River Dam
project, which was eventually abandoned in the 1980s. Cut to SF’s Manilatown, where I-Hotel
tenants—along with Al Robles who organized a broad coalition of protestors—staged
a similar resistance against displacement by urban renewal developers; after
the last tenants were evicted in 1977, the land sat vacant for over 25 years
until new I-Hotel built for low-income seniors (see documentary, “The Fall of the I-Hotel.”)
(After Tony saw my blog
posting of an I-Hotel SRO exhibit at CHSA 5 years ago, his Manilatown Heritage
Foundation Board of Directors, where he serves as President, persuaded CHSA to
donate its I-Hotel SRO installation to I-Hotel Manilatown Center. Now
after 7 years at SDA, Tony is taking a sabbatical in North Carolina where he will
pursue music and writing.)
Chinese Culture Center’s
exhibit, Present Tense 2019: Task of Remembrance, included Xu Tan’s video, “Memory
of a Gardener and Guardian,” featuring 92-year-old SF Chinatown social
justice activist Chang Jok Lee, who recounted protesting the eviction
of elderly residents from I-Hotel during 1968-1977.
Public benefits
At Pathways to Justice, a statewide
conference hosted every 3 years by State Bar of California and Legal Aid
Association of California, I attended Expanding CalFresh to SSI
Recipients presented by Trinh Phan from Justice in Aging, Michael
Herald from Western Center on Law and Poverty, and Andrew Cheyne from California Association of Food Banks. Effective
June 1, 2019, a recipient of SSI can apply for CalFresh (in-person at County
office, telephone, or online at https://ssi.getcalfresh.org/)
and get
up to $192 per month in food assistance, without reduction to SSI grant amount. If the SSI recipient lives with others who
already receive CalFresh, SSI recipient is automatically added at next
reporting deadline; and if this addition results in CalFresh loss, then “mixed”
households can receive Supplemental or Transitional Nutrition Benefit (new
state-funded programs). Seniors age 60+
represent more than half of over 1.2 million low-income Californians who
receive SSI.
Home-delivered meals
Nourishing the Whole
Person at Meals on Wheels San Francisco (MOWSF): Last month’s 32nd Annual
Star Chefs & Vintners Gala raised a
record-breaking $3.3 million, representing
22% of MOWSF's $15 million annual budget. As MOWSF celebrates its 50th
anniversary next year, it launched a capital campaign to support the growing numbers of
older adults who wish to age in their own homes—with meals and safety checks,
nutrition counseling, social work home visits, friendly visitor volunteers,
etc. MOWSF will break ground for construction of its new and larger kitchen
(35,000 square feet!) next month, with move-in
expected in Fall 2020, so I decided to join this month’s kitchen tour for these
“before” photos.
After donning food
safety hairnets, we began tour of 7,000 square feet kitchen. MOWSF Chief Program Officer David
Linnell said 2.1 million meals for
4,700 clients were prepared last year by 36 kitchen staff. All professional staff because insurance cost
would triple if volunteers are used in kitchen. (Sign-up for other MOWSF
volunteer opportunities at https://www.mowsf.org/volunteer/!) Soup is made from scratch to
control sodium content, and this pair of 40 gallon Tucs kettles will be
replaced by a 200 gallon kettle in the new kitchen!
Next year, MOWSF plans
to switch to compostable food containers made of sugar cane pulp from Indonesia.
MOWSF’s Bayview building was a former greenhouse, which may have
attracted Golden Gate Gardening author Pam Peirce (seated to left in photo above) to the tour + lunch with MOWSF CEO Ashley McCumber. In 2007, Ashley became MOWSF’s CEO as he
contemplated his own aging without children and who would be there to take care
of him? He discussed factors contributing to the “vast unmet need of seniors”
and expansion to serve younger adults with disabilities and Navigation Centers (which
provide temporary room and board to unhoused San Franciscans as they work with
case managers to secure housing): demographics (aging Baby Boomers), living
longer, SF’s high cost of living, families moving out of SF so seniors left
behind without support, limited access to alternatives in the continuum of care
(assisted living, nursing home, affordable senior housing). MOWSF exists to feed and provide support
services so people are visible and safe at home. He highlighted ways to get involved in MOWSF initiatives
like Adopt-a-Building (connecting millennials to SRO clients), home-delivered
groceries (serving 500 clients per week), Friendly Visitors, and supporting
clients with pets (supply food, walk dog).
Hoarding
As a former MOWSF social worker, my home
visits to clients included home safety checks.
Clutter was a common issue with clients living in SROs with limited
space, and I often referred these clients seeking help to Mental Health Association of San Francisco (MHASF), which has effective peer support and recovery programs. (Clients with more serious hoarding cases
were referred to Adult Protective Services, which has categorized nearly half of
its cases due to self-neglect, including hoarding.) MHASF hosted a very engaging PROPEL Peer Convening for Sparking Joy/Collecting Behaviors at CounterPulse.
Susie DuBois, MFT, presented Does This Spark Joy? A Closer Look at the
Marie Kondo Method for People All Along the Clutter Scale, a witty and
critical perspective on the best-selling book, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying
Up (2014). After reviewing Konmari
(living in present, having gratitude
for things, being mindful of what’s truly important), Susie concluded this
method can be successful for people with lower levels of clutter; people with
space, time, ability, energy, health and resources to sort, discard and get
stuff out; and people who need a little nudge or structure for them to be
motivated and successful at decluttering.
Clutter
is disorganized collecting, and hoarding is a psychiatric disorder that impacts
about
3-5% of the population. According to DSM-5, hoarding symptoms appear
almost 3x more prevalent in older adults age 55+ compared with younger
adults.
What if too much stuff, too little space (like SRO)? Susie recommended:
· Get help, find support, learn more about collecting behaviors: MHASF offers free peer-led support groups for people overwhelmed by too much stuff
· Address safety and health issues 1st!
· Reduce acquiring: for example, Buried in Treasures: Help for Compulsive Acquiring, Saving, and Hoarding (2013), by Drs. Tolin, Frost, and Steketee, can be borrowed from SFPL
· Address co-occurring disorders: collecting behaviors can be symptom of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), depression, bipolar disorder, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), obsessive compulsive personality disorder (OCPD), post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and schizophrenia.
· Identify your motivation and define your goals
· Start with things that are easiest to discard
MHASF Peer Coach Robyn
McGrath shared motivating advice from her favorite self-help books in Getting
Things Done: Tips for Decluttering on Your Own:
·
David
Allen’s Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-free Productivity (2015)
– 2-minute rule: do now, or file for later/add to project; Robyn called this a
“variation of OHIO: Only Handle It Once, but
better”)
·
Dana
White’s How to Manage Your Home without Losing Your Mind: Dealing with Your House’s Dirty Little Secrets (2016) – visibility rule: don’t start with your closet
because you can’t see progress but might create visible clutter; instead,
visible progress has lasting effects that make you feel good, start with
5-minute clean-up because less is more
·
Marie
Kondo’s The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up (2014) – start with easy
stuff, like clothes which are easy to obtain and replace
·
Jen
Sincero’s You are a Badass: How to Stop Doubting Your Greatness and Start Living an Awesome Life (2013) – take bold action, get crystal clear on what you
desire, then take “hell-bent, joyful, passion-fueled action” and repeat
No mention of The
Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning: How to Free Yourself and Your Family from a Lifetime of Clutter (2018) by Margareta
Magnusson, who is “80 to 100 years old,” and asks “Will I ever need this?”
and “Will anyone I know be happier if I
save this?”
Julie Rosenthal, MSW,
Director of Social Services at Bar Association of San Francisco’s Justice and Diversity Center, covered A Holistic Approach to Eviction Prevention for
Clients with Hoarding and Cluttering Challenges, by facilitating audience
participation of their lived experience with “deep cleaning.”
Domestic violence
Domestic violence
In a youth-focused
society, child and domestic abuse get more attention, while elder abuse is
almost an invisible problem despite increased violence and financial abuse against
older adults. This
year’s World Elder Abuse Awareness Day (WEAAD) panel focused
on Rights
and Resources for Older Victims of Domestic Violence in San Francisco: Mary Twomey, Elder Justice consultant; Beverly Upton,
Executive Director of SF Domestic Violence Consortium; Melissa
McNair, Victim Witness Advocate at SF District Attorney Victim Services; and Ali
Riker, Director of Programs at SF Sheriff’s Office. Mary
provided statistics: 1 out of 10 older adults are abused in their lifetime; 20%
of abusers are intimate partners, split equally between men (mostly physical)
and women (mostly neglect). Beverly talked about isolation, fear, threatened eviction,
immigration and accumulated trauma issues that are amplified as a senior; then
described partners in Consortium with specific cultural/linguistic capabilities
to connect with diverse older victims.
Panel
did not include older survivors, but check out videos at Lifting Up the Voices of Older Survivors.
Substance use
Rising rates of elder
abuse have been linked to rising opioid addictions, and aging Baby Boomers are dying
from accidental overdoses at a higher rate than 18- to 45-year-olds, mostly
involving prescription opioid painkillers. Yet, when drug overdose deaths occur,
it is usually not clear if the death is accidental or “silent suicide.”
“Life expectancy, perhaps the
broadest measure of a nation’s health, has fallen for three straight years, in
part because of the rise in drug overdoses and suicides. That’s the first
three-year drop since 1915 to 1918.” – Cynthia Koons, “Latest Suicide Data Show the Depth of U.S. Mental Health Crisis,” Bloomberg (June 20, 2019)
Organizations like Program of
All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) and LTC facilities generally
do not accept people with substance use disorders (SUDs) because they are not set
up as addiction treatment centers or detox units (e.g., facility lacks clinician licensed to prescribe buprenorphine). Last year, the first
skilled nursing facility with addiction services opened in Allegheny County.
Opioid crisis is being
treated like the public health crisis it is (white privilege?) rather than war on drugs. Last
year, U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging held a hearing, Preventing and Treating Opioid Misuse Among Older Americans, and bipartisan Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that Promotes Opioid Recovery and Treatment (SUPPORT)
for Patients and Communities Act became law.
Last month’s SF Bay Area
Integrated Behavioral Health (IBH) Symposium focused on Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) at East Bay Community Foundation. Maxwell Davis, Director of CalSWEC IBH
Program, introduced Beth Rutkowski, MPH, Director of Training at UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Program, who explained why integration is so
important:
·
Adults
with serious mental illness (SMI) die 25 years earlier, largely as a result of
treatable medical conditions
·
Adults
with SUDs die 26 years earlier, due to physical health problems related to
their long-term substance use
We watched video, “Treating Addiction in Primary Care at Marin Health and Wellness.”
Addiction is a chronic disease of brain affecting reward,
motivation, memory and related circuitry. (In above photos based on imaging
technology to measure metabolism or glucose uptake in brain and heart, bright
yellow/red colors represent high functioning, and blue/purple colors represent
disease.) Opioids are highly addictive,
and brain cells can become dependent on exogenous opioids so that users require
regular dosing in order to function. Initially,
opioids cause euphoria, then slow down thinking and reaction time.
The presentation’s messaging was similar to Nova documentary, Addiction
(2018), and last month’s UCSF Osher Mini
Medical School series, Everybody Hurts: How We Understand and Treat Pain and Addiction:
·
Addiction
is chronic, treatable medical condition versus moral failing
·
Evidence-based treatments include FDA-approved medication-assisted treatment (MAT, such as methadone
dosings at clinic approved by SAMHSA; prescribed buprenorphine, or combined
with naloxone to make suboxone injection), and distribution of naloxone (Narcan
spray) to reverse effects of opioid overdose
To critically examine
our assumptions and biases around OUD and MAT, we considered language to reduce
stigma (e.g., DSM-5 replaced stigmatizing language like “abuse” and
“dependence” with opioid “use disorder”). To
promote recovery, we use affirming language to inspire hope and capital
resources (social, physical, human, cultural).
HIV Education Prevention Project of Alameda County (HEPPAC) distributed Naloxone kits with 2
Narcan sprays + SCARE ME instructions for naloxone injection, so looked up “how
to use Narcan spray.” When calling 911, important to give
location and say “the person is unconscious and not breathing”—no need to say
any drugs involved until ambulance arrives.
Despite the fact that
there are not adequate services available for voluntary treatment, SF has
approved implementation of Senate Bill 1045, under a 5-year pilot program that
would require people with SMI + SUD to be placed under court-ordered
conservatorship after eight 5150s (72-hour emergency psychiatric holds) in a
12-month period. The
intention appears to remove “visible mental illness” (i.e., homeless) from the
streets, without addressing the underlying problem of access to mental health
services and housing, especially since the bill provides no funding for both. (SF General Hospital has only 22 acute care
beds in its inpatient psychiatric unit, and a national psychiatrist shortage
leaving 1 of 4 psychiatrist positions chronically vacant.) Instead,
the Voluntary Services First Coalition (includes SDA and other senior advocacy
organizations) favor restoring $40 million in budget cuts since 2008 for mental
health services to address access problem.
At last month’s Drug
Policy Alliance’s Coercive Treatment – Moving Beyond “For Your Own Good”
conference, Maia Szalavitz, author of Unbroken Brain: A
Revolutionary New Way of Understanding Addiction (2016), provided a historical review
of “illegal” drugs based on racism (opium/Chinese, cocaine/Black, marijuana/Mexican)
and not science (tobacco smoking and alcohol cause more deaths); oppressive
treatments based on Synanon cult (forcing people who need help with addiction
to feel powerless and humiliated in group encounters, denying access to outside
world and punishing them); Walden House and Delancey Street in SF “copied” Synanon
drug rehab model.
Strict abstinence rehab
programs based on the 12-step Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) model are not supported by
evidence. One-size-fits-all is not the
solution, especially when treating older adults.
Instead, Maia advocated
for harm reduction which is evidence-based: kindness and compassion works in
addiction recovery to help people because “taking away everything including the
only thing that makes you feel okay in the world, and then say now you’re cured”
– this will not fix a traumatized, often mentally ill population; for example,
Maia who is on autism spectrum took drugs to feel socially comfortable.
Spectrum of Coercion
– Manifestations of Coercive Treatment for People Who Use Drugs panel: Denise
Tomasini-Joshi of Open Society Foundations said drug courts and other punitive
drug policies do not acknowledge realities of
trauma, poverty, homelessness and mental health needs of people who use drugs,
as well as the scarcity of treatment services and housing options. She noted
Portugal’s drug decriminalization and investment in a health-based harm
reduction model since 2001 has seen an increase in the number of people in
treatment for drug addiction. (SF District Attorney George Gascon traveled to
Portugal to study whether decriminalization might work in the City.)
Jennifer Friedenbach of
Coalition of Homelessness criticized expansion of conservatorship to coerce
treatment under SB 1045 because this would displace people in line for
voluntary treatment. Northeastern Law
Professor Leo Beletsky asked whether people fail
treatments or treatments fail people as jail/prison cannot be therapeutic; he
recommended changing the narrative.
Drivers of Coercion –
Vulnerable Populations, Stigmatization, and Economics panel: Attorney Talila Lewis noted
coercive treatment was an oxymoron; putting people in poorhouse/asylum to label
“others” as idiots, insane, senile and elderly; and people who show resistance are
labeled as insane or criminal.
Beyond Coercion-Where
Do We Go from Here? panel
recognized need to reduce barriers to treatment, but not use coercion as tool
to increase access. Sera Davidow of
Western Mass Recovery Learning Community criticized “fake choices” (forcing
hospitalization after one chooses not to go voluntarily), diagnoses that lack
scientific validity (like schizophrenia given to blacks in 1960s civil rights
movement by an oppressive system), and language of internalized oppression. Instead, she suggested a
trauma-informed approach: ask what happened to you (abuse, loss of power),
instead of what is wrong with you – the latter is “misguided, a way of masking/distracting
from societal ills.” She was skeptical
about evidence-base, which depends on who has money and social capital, at the
expense of actual support that many find useful.
Patt Denning, founder of
Center for Harm Reduction Therapy, talked
about value of listening to people based on her work as therapist, so she does
not blame the client. While working at SF Department
of Public Health (DPH)’s Castro Mental Health Center, she referred white gay
men using drugs and alcohol for treatment.
She discontinued making referrals after hearing complaints and then visiting
Walden House (where she was appalled seeing clients standing in corners with
dunce hats, being humiliated like told to take cotton out of ears and put into
mouth) and 50 AA meetings (which she “found scary as recovering Catholic” yet
95% of treatment in U.S. is based on this 12-step mutual support fellowship,
Christian values and meant to be anonymous and voluntary). She decided to make up her own treatment
programs, and eventually “tired of DPH bureaucracy” so she set up her own non-profit
practice.
Leah Warner, NP with SF Homeless
Outreach Project’s Street Medicine team since 2014 when NP could not get
special waiver until law changed in 2016, allowing NP to complete training to prescribe
buprenorphine; she said challenge is people who are homeless with SUDs face
many barriers to access primary care including MAT, so she meets them where
they are to provide low-barrier, life-saving buprenorphine to prevent overdose.
Attorney Wilda White spoke of need to expand
treatment beyond “beds and meds” as she related how drugs forced on her brother
diagnosed with schizophrenia had harmful side effects: tardive dyskinesia from
anti-psychotics, thyroid removed from lithium, diabetes from Zyprexa.
For a perspective on mass
incarceration, historian John Martini moderated Alcatraz alumni panel
discussion at Hilton’s Cityscape Lounge. Former Alcatraz 1259 inmate Bill Baker said
boredom was the “real story” while locked up in 6x9 isolation cell, no rehab as
he repeated his crimes and lived most of his life in prisons. Former prison guard described typical workday
routine as redundant only interrupted when a fight or attempted escape
occurred. Also heard from former
Alcatraz island residents whose parents worked in prison, and they were mostly
oblivious to prison life.
From 46th
floor of Hilton Union Square, enjoyed view of Civic Center and Tenderloin
District where I am returning to work in this community.
Linda was my preceptor during my nutrition internship at DAAS nearly 8 years ago, and I continued to benefit from her deep expertise and guidance. During my gerontology internship at Administration for Community Living 5 years ago, I consulted with Linda to assist American Samoa Territorial Administration on Aging in launching its own senior congregate meals program, which was modeled after Linda’s trailblazing work to provide more culturally appropriate Polynesian fare at Samoan Community Development Center. This project with American Samoa was thought to be mission impossible after attempts over 20 years, but mission accomplished within 6 months, our eternal gratitude to Linda!
Pursuing
meaning and purpose
“It’s
the American idea: Get rich, then do nothing.
Sit on a beach. Go out for an
expensive dinner. Go to Las Vegas. But those kinds of pursuits turn people into
narcissists and thrill addicts… They don’t prioritize the good of the
community, they don’t fight for social causes, and they aren’t pursuing a life
of meaning and purpose. As a result, they
often end up isolated and depressed…. Meaning is connection, relationships,
contribution, and service.” –Esther Wojcicki, author of How to Raise
Successful People: Simple Lessons for Radical Results (2019), using Trust, Respect, Independence, Collaboration, and Kindness = TRICK
In my
previous career in employee benefits, I worked with employers and employees in
the workplace to meet their goals for financial retirement security. Now I
work primarily with older people who have “earned” their retirement with
freedom of time to pursue (fill-in-the-blank). According to Erik Erikson’s stages of
psychosocial development, following an adulthood of generativity (v. stagnation)
for care, mature people seek ego integrity (v. despair) for wisdom.
At this month’s SF Aging and Adult Services Commission meeting, Department of Aging and Adult Services
(DAAS) Executive Director Shireen McSpadden recognized Linda Lau, RD, MPH, for
her 35.5 years of service, DAAS’ longest-serving employee! As Lead Nutritionist, Linda developed with
community partners and oversaw the City’s wide-ranging nutrition
programs to meet older adults where they are (home-delivered meals and
groceries, congregate meal sites offering 9 different cuisines to
please diverse palates, CHAMPPS restaurant meals) and evidence-based health
promotion programs (Healthier Living-CDSMP, Diabetes
Empowerment Education, Always Active, Fall Prevention, Tai Chi for Arthritis
and Fall Prevention).
Commissioner’s best line about Linda: “amazing
that you could work for the City for 35 years and not look older than 30!” Yes, Linda walks the talk: always active and
modeling healthier living while fundraising (Walk to End Alzheimer’s, 24-Hour Cancer Dance-a-thon), bicycling everywhere, growing her own food (and sharing fruits in the
office), encouraging innovation
while maintaining high standards to truly make a difference. Hard to imagine DAAS without Linda,
but now it’s her turn to benefit from her legacy of award-winning nutrition and
health promotion programs!
Linda was my preceptor during my nutrition internship at DAAS nearly 8 years ago, and I continued to benefit from her deep expertise and guidance. During my gerontology internship at Administration for Community Living 5 years ago, I consulted with Linda to assist American Samoa Territorial Administration on Aging in launching its own senior congregate meals program, which was modeled after Linda’s trailblazing work to provide more culturally appropriate Polynesian fare at Samoan Community Development Center. This project with American Samoa was thought to be mission impossible after attempts over 20 years, but mission accomplished within 6 months, our eternal gratitude to Linda!
Personally,
Linda has helped me so much with her inspiration, sense of social justice, and amazing
recommendation letters that got me into graduate school 2x as well as
scholarships, and many employment opportunities. When I told Linda about my plans to return to
work in the community, she announced her retirement from DAAS with plans to be
more politically active…so looking forward to collaborating more for positive
change and healthy aging in community!
At Linda’s retirement
party held in atrium outside DAAS office, Linda danced with her hubby Alan. When Linda officially retires from DAAS at
fiscal year end June 30, she has plans for traveling, more dancing and time
with her family. She will continue to
pursue meaning and purpose: participation in SF Food Security Task Force, as trainer
for Diabetes and Tai Chi programs, and community activism focused on equity and
inclusion.
Standing on
the shoulders of giants at Linda’s retirement party, Catherine Wong, RD at SF Chinatown
Public Health (also co-author of cookbook with Martin Yan!) and Lisa Yamashiro, RD,
Coordinator at City College of SF Nutrition Program, which graduated its 19th
class this summer! Lisa required students (yours truly) to document our learning
journey during our nutrition internships, which later inspired me to start this
blog to document my learning journey in gerontology.
As a foodie,
I connect food with anything. Most
enduring is how food connects to gerontology, which makes sense because
centenarians like to credit food (and sleep) for their longevity (following
summary from Marc Agronin’s book, The End of Old Age):
·
Jeanne
Louise Calment (French) who lived to 122: port wine and chocolate
·
Hendrikje
van Andel-Schipper (Dutch) lived to 115: raw herring and orange juice
·
Misao
Okawa (Japanese) lived to 117: sushi and sleep
·
Emma
Morano (Italian) lived to 117: raw eggs and brandy, and sleep
·
Susannah
Mushatt Jones (American) lived to 116: bacon, scrambled eggs, grits, and sleep
And there we have
recipes for healthier living 😊. Bon appetit!