Word: edens
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...Lane, the long-term-care facility where Fournier lives in Shelton, Wash., has embraced the Eden Alternative, a growing movement whose aim is to revolutionize and deinstitutionalize the long-term-care industry. By infusing centers with life, giving power to front-line caregivers and making the emotional care of residents a priority, Eden has taken hold at more than 300 homes nationwide...
...Among Eden's staunchest supporters are state leaders. In some states, including New Jersey and South Carolina, officials have used fines collected from nursing homes to establish grants for Eden. In May the Institute for Quality Improvement in Long Term Health Care in San Marcos, Texas, published the results of a two-year study of five Texas homes at which Eden is implemented. The study showed dramatic reductions in infections and behavioral incidents among residents and lower rates of absenteeism among staff. Later this month, Bill Thomas, the impassioned geriatrician who founded the movement in 1991, will head to Washington...
Taking its name from the biblical garden, Eden holds that even the best traditional nursing homes have been modeled on hospitals--with their rigid hierarchies, overdependence on medication and sterile cultures. Staff members at Eden homes have equal status and make decisions in teams. "Staff treat elderly the way they're treated by management," says Thomas. "You can have as many cockatiels as you want, but it won't matter if you don't overhaul the culture." That can be hard, says Anita Tesh, associate professor of nursing at University of North Carolina at Greensboro. "Once people see the atmosphere...
...Eden Riegel '02, known around campus for the lasso tricks she learned for her role in the Broadway show Will Rogers Follies, has roped herself an even bigger...
Everything the river offers turns on the idea of America as Eden--an idea no less enchanting today than it was to the colonists. The country finds Eden; the country loses Eden; the country yearns for Eden. In Life on the Mississippi, Twain described his early infatuation with the river's beauty at sunset: "A broad expanse of the river was turned to blood; in the middle distance the red hue brightened into gold through which a solitary log came floating, black and conspicuous; in one place a long, slanting mark lay sparkling upon the water; in another the surface...