Green Houses Offer Elders an Alternative

Many frail elders seek an alternative to the typical institutional-style nursing home. With more Green Houses taking root across the United States, that alternative is getting closer to home.

Published: June 24, 2008

The Green House concept is challenging traditional views of long-term care. The project aims to establish small houses for long-term care needs, rather than the large-scale institutions traditionally associated with nursing homes.

Green Houses provide an environment in which residents receive nursing support and clinical care without the care becoming the focus of their existence. By altering the facility size, interior design, staffing patterns and methods of delivering skilled services to residents, the Green House model provides residents greater health and lifestyle benefits compared to residents of traditional nursing and assisted-living buildings. Early results show that Green House residents report higher satisfaction levels, less physical decline and less depression.

A Green House is designed to look like a private home or apartment, constructed with seven to ten bedrooms for seniors—so each resident has his or her own room. The common living space in the heart of the house consists of a shared living room, dining room and kitchen facilities. The common room centers around one big table where the group—residents, staff, caregivers, family and friends—sits down to dinner every night together.

"The Green House is based on deep relationships; nurturing, sustaining and protecting each person," says Joyce Ebmeier, a guide for a nine-person home in Nebraska. "Excellent medical treatment is a key component of life in a Green House, but it is delivered discretely and supportively, with respect to the rhythm of each elder's life."

The concept has spread from four Green House homes in Tupelo, Miss., to more than 40 homes operating in 10 states. NCB Capital Impact of Arlington, Va., under the leadership of Robert Jenkens, has received funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to replicate the Green House model on a national scale with the goal of developing 50 such projects by 2010. Editor's Note: The success of this model and the autonomy it provides its residents is so powerful that on December 5, 2008, the 50th Green House opened in the United States, one year earlier than anticipated.

"We are trying to create a nursing home that people will want to live and work in," says Jenkens. "We want to make nursing homes places where people get care but their lives have meaning and purpose."

 


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Listed below is one grant that supported this project.

Grant Awarded to Amount
Replication of the Green House Project: Developing small community homes as alternatives to nursing homes NCB Capital Impact (Arlington, VA)
ID#: 053217
Robert C. Jenkens, M.S.R.E.D.
703-647-2314
rjenkens@ncbcapitalimpact.org
http://www.ncbcapitalimpact.org
Actual award: $9,584,202
November 2005 to October 2010

Contact information is correct as of the closing of the grant(s).

RWJF may have supported this project with other funding that is not listed.

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NewsHour Reports on the Green House Project

Publication date:
January 28, 2008

Summary:
The venerable PBS news show shines the spotlight on an RWJF-supported effort to offer an alternative to traditional nursing homes.

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Green House Founder Profiled By U.S. News & World Report as a Top National Leader

Publication date:
June 15, 2006

Summary:
Physician Bill Thomas was named one of nation's top 25 leaders for envisioning a home-like alternative to traditional nursing home care.

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A Place to Call Home

Publication date:
December 19, 2007

Summary:
A radical departure from traditional nursing homes, the Green House is a place where elders can receive assistance and support with daily living and clinical care.

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Returning Control and Dignity to Elderly Residents

Publication date:
December 10, 2007

Summary:
Joyce Ebmeier serves as "guide" for a Green House that provides long-term, skilled nursing care for elders in a deinstitutionalized, home-like setting.

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Wall Street Journal Takes a Closer Look at the Green House Model

Publication date:
Nov 19, 2009

Summary:
In this June 2008 WSJ article, Rising Challenger Takes on Elder Care System, reporter Lucette Lagnado takes a closer look at the project.

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Green House Model Featured in Parade Magazine

Publication date:
May 31, 2009

Summary:
A Parade Magazine article takes an inside look at the Green House concept of residential elder care.

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