The hostess seats you at your preferred table in your
favorite restaurant. She hands you the
menu and you scan it for Chicken Parmesan, your favorite. The server takes your order. It arrives and you
enjoy a pleasant, relaxing meal.
For people with Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, and other
memory disorders, ordering food from a printed menu can be a frustrating and
anxious experience. They may no longer be able to visualize the food
they would like to eat from the printed word on the menu.
In PPh’s Personal Care Chapter’s Program, residents received
meals in a private, cheery dining room, by ordering from a printed menu.
“We found that this made meal time very stressful for
residents,” said Mary Ellen Keller, Director of Resident Life. “We knew that we needed to make a change.”
Mary Ellen and Certified Dementia Practitioners Bridget
Klotz, Gabrielle Lazzaro and Kathy Nucero, began researching other
options. They especially liked the
program that Fairmount Homes in Lancaster
County offered to its
residents with memory disorders.
Table Side Service in Chapters. |
Here's how it works. A portable buffet is rolled next to the dining table so that
residents may see and smell the selections.
Staff tell residents about the menu options, allow them to make their
selections, and serve them.
Additionally, Table Side Service has led to increased
appetite and weight gain for Chapters residents.
Chapters' Table Side Service is a simple, low-cost way to ensure choice
and better quality of life for people with Alzheimer’s, dementia, and other memory
disorders.
For more information about The Philadelphia Protestant Home, call 215-697-8000 or go to www.pphfamily.org
No comments:
Post a Comment