Segregated Nursing homes: Your opinion Please!

Nurses Activism

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I got this in an email from google alerts for nursing.

I know what my opinion is, I would like yours.

Thanks!

Posted on Wed, Mar. 10, 2004

Segregation of patients by ethnicity in nursing homes praised, criticized

BY COLLEEN MASTONY

Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO - (KRT) - Sung Y. Kim, an 83-year-old native of Korea, spends days shuffling from room to room in slippered feet, rallying her fellow nursing-home residents for a game of Korean cards or a trip to the dining hall for some steaming seaweed soup.

On her fourth-floor hallway, everyone, including the nurses and doctors, is Korean. But taking the elevator down three floors is like stepping into a different country.

There, on a wing for Indian and Pakistani residents, Syed Shah, 57, sits with friends who speak Urdu over a meal of spicy dal and fresh roti like their families used to cook for them at home. Though Kim and Shah live in the same nursing home, separate cultural programs make their worlds seem oceans apart.

It is a new phenomenon in the nursing-home industry, where amid the universal signs of old age - the wheelchairs and walkers, IV bags and bedpans - administrators have increasingly grouped residents by culture and ethnicity, down to providing separate staffs, activities and meal plans.

As such programming becomes more common, a debate is growing about whether it is appropriate.

Such living areas help centralize bilingual staff and make residents feel at home, proponents say. But critics argue the approach is unnecessarily polarizing and even offensive to American ideals.

"One part of the debate says: `Here we are in America. It is the melting pot. Aren't we supposed to bring people together?' " said Melanie Chavin, vice president for program services at the Alzheimer's Association in Illinois. "The other half of the debate, especially when you are dealing with memory loss, is that people might not remember they are even living in America. Why not give them what they are familiar with?"

At Lake Shore HealthCare and Rehabilitation Centre in Chicago, where Kim and Shah live, Koreans are on the fourth floor while Indian and Pakistani residents live on the first. Other parts of the nursing home are integrated.

On a recent afternoon, a group of Korean seniors played a rousing game of Yoot (a Korean game played with four sticks). Meanwhile, Indian and Pakistani residents had their own activities, such as performances of traditional dance.

The only culture clash, according to administrators, came when the Filipino nursing staff developed a taste for sticky rice and the Korean cook refused to give them any, saying she didn't have enough for staff and residents. The incident was settled with the purchase of a second rice cooker.

"I called it the rice war," said Judy Lewis, the assistant administrator.

The culinary tussle highlights a shift in diversity at nursing homes facilities.

In Illinois, the percentage of white residents in nursing homes declined by 6 percentage points between 1997 and 2001, while the number of Indian, Asian and Hispanic residents increased yearly, according to a report by the Illinois Department of Public Health.

Immigrants from Europe still make up the largest group of foreign-born seniors, accounting for 1.2 million of the 3.3 million immigrants older than 65 in the United States in 2002, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. But those from Asia numbered 770,000 in 2002; those from Latin America - many are from Mexico - numbered 1.1 million, according to the Census Bureau.

In the face of these changes, grouping residents by ethnicity makes sense, said Shiva Singh Khalsa, who runs the Indian and Pakistani program at Lake Shore.

"If someone is confused - maybe they have dementia - and they don't see anyone who looks like them, it can be scary," he said.

For generations in their home countries, large extended families have taken care of their parents and grandparents. When families immigrate, expectations from the old country collide with the reality of life in America. Here, relatives often live far apart, and two-career families work long hours, making it difficult to care for aging or sick relatives at home.

After Vinita Parsram's husband suffered a stroke a decade ago, she couldn't afford to stay home, and she couldn't lift her partially paralyzed husband. Yet few understood her decision to put him in a nursing home.

"They would say, `You put your husband in a nursing home!' " said Parsram, 56, of Lincolnwood, Ill. "My daughter came home crying, saying, so-and-so said, `Look what your mother has done.' "

Places such as Lake Shore help smooth the transition and ease the guilt, many families say.

On a recent day, the Pakistani cook at Lake Shore was preparing potato and pea subjee, basmati rice and kheer (a rice pudding). The pudding is a favorite of Parsram's husband, Chan, 64, who said he had been depressed while living in an integrated nursing home before the family found Lake Shore.

Still, critics bristle at the idea of grouping people by ethnicity.

"We should not be stereotyping, and we should not be segregating," said John Marc Sianghio, administrator of Harmony Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Albany Park in Chicago.

Residents at Harmony - many of whom are Asian - are paired with a roommate who speaks the same language and are provided with bilingual nurses and doctors. But the rooms are interspersed throughout the facility, because, Sianghio said, "that is the American way."

Yet culturally specific nursing-home care is nothing new.

At the turn of the century, when the country was receiving waves of new immigrants, ethnic and religious organizations started the first nursing homes, according to Celia Berdes, a professor at the Buehler Center on Aging at Illinois' Northwestern University.

The rise of the commercial for-profit industry in the 1960s and gentrification of old immigrant neighborhoods forced many large ethnic nursing homes to close or, like their immigrant residents, integrate into the larger culture, Berdes said.

Minorities and immigrants are still more likely to keep their elderly relatives at home, Berdes said, but attitudes are changing.

"They are adjusting to American life. Every year, they are accepting more," said Dr. Yong Chun, 59, who treats Korean residents at Lake Shore.

Won Hong, 64, visits his 90-year-old mother at Lake Shore, rubs her arms and brushes her hair from her forehead. After a stroke, she was left partially paralyzed, unable to speak and almost completely unresponsive.

"I felt like I lost her," said Hong, of Bartlett, Ill. But a few weeks ago, she began responding to the Korean nurses.

He believes having people speak Korean to his mother helped coax her back from the edge of death. "Korean elders need to be taken care of in their own way," he said. In a dayroom, where nurses have pushed his mother's bed to be in the afternoon light, he stands next to his mother and holds her hand. Sometimes, he said, she squeezes back.

"A huge improvement," Hong said.

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© 2004, Chicago Tribune.

Visit the Chicago Tribune on the Internet at http://www.chicagotribune.com

Specializes in LTC,Hospice/palliative care,acute care.

That's no different then ethnic neighborhoods and as long as it is voluntary I think it is great.Yet-in Pa we can not segregate residents according to their abilities-so we can have a tube feeder with a trach in a room with an alert and oriented person...They did away with acuity based units in LTC back in the early 90's...The regulatory "Gods" decided that If we had a resident that has a massive CVA their right to return to their same room takes precedence over everyone else's rights...I can not imagine how demoralizing it must be to be alert and oriented and roomed with dementia screamers....We are a county home with no private rooms...it can get oogly.....Sleep issues,noise issues-families and residents fighting over space.. :uhoh21:

I guess voluntary is the key. I do think it would be nice for people to get the type of food they like and to be able to communicate with their neighbours. LTC is very different that a hospital since it's someone's home.

When I worked in LTC, we had several Native American Indian residents that did not speak english. Each was lonely and isolated, until they were grouped together. It worked out well for them, and I think it is a good idea.

I believe that the main purpose of this is to allow the residents to feel more "at home." I think it's wonderful.

Segragating residents doesn't sound like an accurate description of the program described in the article at all. I agree with jyoung1950 that in the end days of peoples lives and illnesses it is comforting to be around those who understand your language, your customs and can show the kind of respect you expect which may be very different from the western view. For example it is impolite to look a Korean who is senior to you directly in the eyes when speaking. A western person might consider that as being unfriendly.

Specializes in ICU.

I like this idea. If it makes the residents feel more comfortable then, why not?

Afer reading the article I am convinced the term "segregation' is incorrectly applied to this concept.

I agree with the writer who mentions that this type of program is likely geared for a diverse community, maybe a larger city that has greater numbers of aging immigrant populations.

It makes sense to concentrate linguistic and cultural resources in a unit to assist seniors who do not speak English.

I remember more than once seeing unnecessarily sad and confused patients who could not communicate the most basic needs after a stroke or suffering from dementia. (Once I was confronted with a man who spoke only French and no one on the floor could speak French! It says something about the changed demographics of hospital staff as well.)

For those of us who have English as a second language may remember how innapropriate and embarrassing it was for us to go to the doctor and be the translater for our non-English speaking parents.

In San Francisco, there is an entire hospital for Chinese patients. (Its official name, appropriately enough, is "Chinese Hospital." I have always wondered why no marketing genius has gotten to it and renamed the place something typically euphemistic like "Sino-American Health Restoration Center")

There's a large Chinese population here, with old refugees who don't speak a word of English and recently arrived restaurant workers who only know a little. My hospital has an interpreter who speaks the Cantonese dialect and a little Mandarin. But we're SOL when she's off or we get a patient who speaks one of the many Chinese sub-languages.

The Chinese Hospital is small and doesn't do things like open-heart, so we get transfers from them. (Their charts are in English.) Have you ever tried to do pre-op CABG teaching on someone who can't understand a word?

I'm glad that hospital is there. I wish we had something for the Russians,. too. I don't see any problem with ethnic facilities, unless some authority is ordering "You're Korean -- you go the 5th floor or you get out."

it sounds like a most considerate act. i had a patient who only spoke lithuanian and was tremendously isolated. i called her md, who happened to have a large group of lithuanian pts., and even asked him if he could try and get transferred one of his pts. from one snf to the one i worked at (obviously with the family's consent). being in a nursing home can be traumatic enough for many of our patients. i would think that sharing a camaraderie with one's own would be more comforting. the way that people use semantics/linguistics can seemingly cause much more trouble than necessary.

I have to agree with the other posters. I think it is a great idea. If these people have not assimilated into American culture at this point in their lives, now is certainly not the time to force it on them. I can't imagine how lonely it would be for someone to be at an LTC, who has never really adapted to American culture, and now they are suddenly engulfed in it--surrounded by people who don't speak their language, don't understand or know anything about their culture, being given food that is alien to them, and so on. This system sounds like a wonderful idea.

Specializes in Critical Care.

I can see the sense in it and if you know it is that way and you choose to go then I don't see the problem. Now my problem is I want so sticky rice too, LOL !!!

Specializes in ICU.

Perhaps a better term would be "congregated" nursing homes/hospitals???

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