What is Long Term Care?

Loving care for the long term.

  

MEMORY CARE
“When I walk in, I’ll see a resident and they’ll smile and recognize me. They don’t know my name most of the time, because they don’t remember that well, but they know they know me and they know I’m going to help them with whatever they need.”

Vicky Hesser

Director of Nursing

SKILLED NURSING
“You have to be compassionate and have passion in what you do, and I think long term care is the perfect place to really pull all of that together. You have the huge potential to impact somebody’s life and the quality of care and even the lives of their families.”

Jeremy McDaniel

Nurse, Unit Manager

SHORT STAY REHAB
“It’s a population that therapy is really able to impact — we restore these people back to their lives. You walk in and see people who are smiling, who are happy, and who are still planning on going home.”

Tabitha Smith

Rehab Program Director, OT, LT

It’s not one size fits all.

Our oldest generation is as diverse as our youngest. Settings vary based on needs.

Skilled Nursing

Skilled nursing care facilities, also known as nursing homes, are licensed healthcare facilities that offer round-the-clock nursing care and are inspected and regulated by the Alabama Department of Public Health. Skilled nursing care involves trained professionals performing services that are needed due to temporary or permanent injury or illness. Staff also provide custodial or personal care that focuses on helping residents with activities of daily living such as bathing, dressing, personal hygiene, eating, maneuvering in and out of bed, walking and incontinence. Seniors who require a skilled nursing setting can no longer live alone and need more help than their family or present caregiver can provide.

Short-Term Rehabilitation

Short-term rehabilitation programs provide therapy for individuals recovering from a surgery, illness or accident, helping them to achieve their maximum functional capacity and get back to their homes. Short-term rehab patients are not necessarily frail or elderly. They may simply require physical, occupational or speech therapy or a skilled service following time in a hospital. The length of stay for those needing short-term, in-patient rehabilitation can range from a couple of days to several weeks. Skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) offer short-term rehabilitation services that may be covered by Medicare for up to 100 days. Dedicated, skilled therapists are part of an interdisciplinary team that includes physicians, nurses, social workers and nutritionists, who work with the patient and family members to develop an individualized plan of care focused on returning the person to their community at their optimal functional level.

Memory Care

Memory care is a distinct set of services that specifically caters to patients with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia and other types of memory problems. Alzheimer’s and dementia pose unique care challenges. In addition to providing assistance with activities of daily living, the staff in memory care are specially trained to assist people with dementia or impaired cognition. Communities that provide memory care often have a dedicated area for residents requiring this kind of care and incorporate design elements that research has shown to lower stress in individuals with Alzheimer’s or dementia. Outdoor and indoor spaces are designed to be both secure and soothing. 

The Most Caring Career

While a paycheck may be enough reward for performing a job, your life’s work deserves more. Fulfillment. A sense of purpose. The knowledge that you are making the world just a little bit better.

Service to others meets all those criteria – fulfillment in knowing that you are making a difference in the lives of individuals not related to you, purpose in focusing on other people rather than yourself, and often immediate evidence that you are improving the world one smile at a time.
Geriatric care giving provides even more. You will assist a population that has already done its best to make the world a better place. You will establish long-term relationships and enrich your own life as well as others. And you will work in an environment with other compassionate, like-minded people who share your desire to make a difference.

Serving Seniors

Today’s seniors raised us, educated us and supported us through all of our challenges and struggles. Now many of them need our help.

Families do what they can, but dementia and other complex conditions often require full-time care and medical expertise. Skilled nursing facilities provide what loved ones often cannot. They are welcoming places where residents can continue to maintain independence and vitality. They also have the expertise to handle complicated medical conditions and are well-equipped to handle the financial and social services needs of disabled, chronically ill and geriatric residents.

Diverse Communities

Small or large, nursing homes are complex communities alive with action. A diverse group of people and occupations come together to best serve residents’ health care needs utilizing a person-centered approach. Unlike other care settings, where interactions with patients and families are intermittent, geriatric care workers develop deep relationships with residents and their families.

Staff at skilled nursing care facilities work on collaborative teams, maximizing and utilizing each person’s unique skills and knowledge to provide the best possible care to residents.

There are many occupations to pursue in nursing homes. Direct caregivers, primarily nurses, nurse assistants, therapists, and others, are in high demand. Other professionals are also necessary to ensure the best care is provided, including those in administration, social services, dietary and nutrition, care coordination, activities planning and various other support services. All of these roles have the potential to be deeply rewarding, because they all impact patient care in some way.

With an aging population, there are currently many opportunities in long-term care, whether you’re looking for an entry-level position or a path to professional advancement.

So, is it time to find your life’s work?

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